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- Title
Beyond Adaptation and Anthropomorphism: Technology in Simondon.
- Authors
Drury-Melnyk, Danika
- Abstract
This paper attempts to bring the work of Gilbert Simondon into conversation with contemporary discourse on climate change and the Anthropocene. Though his work pre-dates the coining of the term, Simondon, with his non-anthropomorphic view of technology, is in many ways a philosopher of the Anthropocene. In this paper I contrast Simondon's philosophy to the popular idea that technology is something we can use to adapt to the practical problems of the Anthropocene. I will begin by looking briefly at the narrative of adaptation in the Anthropocene. I will then discuss Simondon's philosophy of individuation in order to understand why he rejects these narratives of adaptation. Next, I will look at his own ideas on the role that can be played by technology. Ultimately, I hope to describe why, for Simondon, a view of technology that centres on relation rather than on a particular view of the human subject is crucial to human life. The significance of a non-anthropomorphic approach to technology extends beyond the current ecological crisis to all manner of injustice, violence, and misunderstanding between human groups as well as the environment.
- Subjects
ANTHROPOMORPHISM; SIMONDON, Gilbert, 1924-1989; ANTHROPOCENE Epoch
- Publication
Techne: Research in Philosophy & Technology, 2017, Vol 21, Issue 2/3, p363
- ISSN
0161-7249
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.5840/techne201711374