Description
This volume explores the broad and rich spectrum of contemporary phenomenological engagement with digital technologies. By focusing on plural forms of the digital, it offers arobust and flexible framework for contemporary phenomenological investigations in the digital age.
It contends that the impact of digital technologies on the lifeworld involves both the emergence of novel fields of lived experience in need of phenomenological analysis and the transformation of the method and attitude of phenomenologically oriented philosophers towards the world. The chapters cover topics including immersion in virtual environments, the impact of digital cognitive devices on our perception of time, the invisibility of digital technologies in the lifeworld, the new extension of reality rendered possible by the employment of digital devices, how new technologies affect our intimacy and sexual body, the new methodological paradigm for phenomenological research prompted by digital technologies, the additive upshot of virtual imaginary, the intersection of the real and the virtual in augmented reality experiences, the structures of perception in the regime of digitally generated environments, how it feels like to empathize with others in a regime of virtual reality, process of en-rolling in the constitution of a virtual subject, the transformation of virtual reality into conspiratorial reality by means of on-line media platforms, and the problem of the extent to which technological environments impact human cognitive and perceptual experience.
Phenomenologies of the Digital Age will be of interest to scholars and advanced students working in phenomenology, philosophy of technology, science & technology studies, and media studies.
About the Author
Marco Cavallaro received his Ph.D. from the University of Cologne and is currently a researcher at the Rheinpfalzische Technische Universitat Kaiserslautern-Landau. Specializing in phenomenology, philosophy of mind, and digitality, he authored "Wissenschaft als System: Husserls Begriff der Wissenschaftslehre" and co-edited "The Existential Husserl: A Collection of Critical Essays". His articles are published in journals such as the Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology, Husserl Studies, and Phanomenologische Forschungen.
Nicolas de Warren is Professor of Philosophy and Jewish Studies at Penn State. He is the author of Husserl and the Promise of Time (2010), A Momentary Breathlessness in the Sadness of Time (2018), Original Forgiveness (2020), and German Philosophy and the First World War (2023).
Reviews
"This collection presents a variety of significant contributions that employ the phenomenological approach to investigate the ways in which human experience is shaped and modified by new technologies in the digital age. It is essential reading for anyone interested in the theoretical, existential, and social implications of digital technologies."
Andrea Pace Giannotta, University of Florence, Italy
Book Information
ISBN 9781032319926
Author Marco Cavallaro
Format Hardback
Page Count 230
Imprint Routledge
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd
Weight(grams) 453g