Part 1. Plumbing Phenomenological and Pragmatist Origins
2. Introduction to Sense & Significance Reprint
Don Ihde
3. Ihde's Revolutions: From Paris to Science, Rock, and Radical Architecture
Trish Glazebrook
4. Ihde's Pragmatism
Paul Thompson
5. Postphenomenology, a Technology with a Shelf-life? Ihde's Move from Husserl toward Dewey
Robert C. Scharff
6. For a Cosmotechnical Event: In Honor of Don Ihde and Bernard Stieglar
Yuk Hui
Part 2. Extending Concepts and Theories
7. The Multiplicity of Multistabilities: Turning Multistability into a Multistable Concept
Galit Wellner
8. Relational Ethics: The Primacy of Experience
Lenore Langsdorf
9. Politicizing Postphenomenology
Peter-Paul Verbeek
Part 3. Inventing New Connections
10. Postphenomenology, Ethnography, and the Sensory Intimacy of Mobile Media
Ingrid Richardson
11. Designing and Constructing the (Life)World: Phenomenology and Engineering
Glen Miller and Carl Mitcham
12. Let Things Speak: Don Ihde's Thought and Philosophy of Technology in China
Zhang Kang
13. Hawk: Predatory Vision
Don Ihde
Appendix: A Chronological Listing of Don Ihde's Books and Major Books Dedicated to His Work
Don Ihde
Notes on Contributors
Index
Glen Miller is an Instructional Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy at Texas A&M University. He earned his Ph.D. in Philosophy from the University of North Texas. His research triangulates the history of philosophy, especially ethics and politics, and two emerging areas of concern, the environment and technology. He regularly teaches a large course on engineering ethics and investigates issues in applied, practical, and professional ethics, including bioethics and cyberethics.
Ashley Shew works as a philosopher of technology in the Department for Science, Technology, and Society at Virginia Tech. Her interests include animal studies, disability studies, and emerging technologies. She is the author of Animal Constructions and Technological Knowledge (2017) and co-editor of Spaces for the Future: A Companion to Philosophy of Technology (2017). She currently focuses her research on narrative accounts surrounding disability, enhancement, bodies, and technologies.
This volume includes eleven original essays that explore and expand on the work of Don Ihde, bookended by two chapters by Ihde himself. Ihde, the recipient of the first Society for Philosophy and Technology's Lifetime Achievement Award in 2017, is best known for his development of postphenomenology, a blend of pragmatism and phenomenology that incorporates insights into the ways technology mediates human perception and action.
The book contains contributions from academics from Europe, North America, and Asia, which demonstrates the global impact of Ihde’s work. Essays in the book
explore the relationship between Ihde's work and its origins in phenomenology (especially Husserl and Heidegger) and American pragmatism;
integrate his philosophical work within the embodied experience of radical architecture and imagine the possibility of a future philosophy of technology after postphenomenology;
develop central ideas of postphenomenology and expand the resources present in postphenomenology to ethics and politics; and
extend the influence of Ihde's ideas to mobile media and engineering, and comprehensively assess the influence of his work in China.
The book includes a reprint of the Introduction of Sense and Significance, one of Ihde's first books; "Hawk: Predatory Vision," a new chapter that blends his biographical experience with feminism, technoscience, and environmental observation; and an appendix that lists all of Ihde's books as well as secondary sources annotated by Ihde himself.
Starting with an Editors' Introduction that offers an overview of the central ideas in Ihde's corpus and concluding with an index that facilitates research across the various chapters, this book is of interest to a diverse academic community that includes philosophers, STS scholars, anthropologists, historians, and sociologists.