Hermeneutic Side of Responsible Research and Innovation
Inbunden, Engelska, 2016
Av Armin Grunwald, Germany) Grunwald, Armin (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)
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Fri frakt för medlemmar vid köp för minst 249 kr.The book investigates the meaning of RRI if little or no valid knowledge about consequences of innovation and technology is available. It proposes a hermeneutical turn to investigate narratives about possible futures with respect to their contemporary meaning instead of regarding them as anticipations of the future.
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2016-12-05
- Mått155 x 236 x 23 mm
- Vikt499 g
- FormatInbunden
- SpråkEngelska
- Antal sidor240
- FörlagISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc
- ISBN9781786300850
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Armin Grunwald, Professor of philosophy and ethics of technology at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT); Head of the Institute of Technology Assessment and Systems Analysis (ITAS) at KIT; Head of the Office of Technology Assessment at the German Parliament (TAB).
- Foreword ixPreface xiiiChapter 1. What Makes New Science and Technology Meaningful to Society? 11.1. Motivation and objectives 11.2. The need for orientation in NEST fields 81.3. Short propaedeutic 121.3.1. The meaning of “sociotechnical meaning” 121.3.2. NEST: new and emerging science and technologies 131.3.3. Techno-visionary futures 151.4. A brief guide to this book 171.4.1. The flow of argumentation 171.4.2. The chapters 181.4.3. The achievements 22Chapter 2. Extending the Object of Responsibility Assessments in RRI 252.1. Motivation and overview 252.2. Some impressions of RRI debates so far 272.3. A pragmatic view on the notion of responsibility 312.3.1. The concept of responsibility 322.3.2. The EEE approach to responsibility 342.3.3. Responsibility assessment 352.4. The object of responsibility debates in RRI so far 382.5. The object of responsibility debates in RRI: an extension 392.6. Concluding remarks 43Chapter 3. Assessing Responsibility by Considering Techno-Futures 453.1. Responsibility assessments: introduction and overview 453.2. Brief remarks on the epistemology of prospective knowledge 463.2.1. The epistemologically precarious character of prospective knowledge 473.2.2. Futures as social constructs 483.3. Responsibility for NEST: the orientation dilemma 503.3.1. Challenges to providing orientation in NEST fields 523.3.2. The orientation dilemma 553.4. Three modes of orientation 563.4.1. Prediction and prognostication: mode 1 orientation 573.4.2. Scenarios and the value of diversity: mode 2 orientation 583.4.3. The value of divergence: mode 3 orientation 603.5. The hermeneutic approach to techno-visionary futures 61Chapter 4. Definitions and Characterizations of NEST as Construction of Meaning 654.1. Motivation and point of departure 654.2. Some observations from NEST debates 664.2.1. Nanotechnology 664.2.2. Synthetic biology 684.2.3. Enhancement 714.3. The pragmatic character of definitions 724.4. Defining and characterizing as meaning-giving activity 75Chapter 5. Understanding Nanotechnology: A Process Involving Contested Assignments of Meaning 795.1. Nanotechnology: a paradigmatic RRI story 795.2. The early time of nanotechnology: troubled beginnings 825.2.1. Apocalyptic techno-visionary futures related to nano 825.2.2. Threats to human health and the environment 845.2.3. Philosophical characterizations 865.3. Defining nanotechnology: a mission impossible? 895.4. The meaning of nanotechnology: the shift from a revolutionary to a quite normal technology 945.4.1. Looking back: the development of nanotechnology’s meaning 945.4.2. Hermeneutic work on nanotechnology 965.4.3. Lessons learned for RRI debates 99Chapter 6. Robots: Challenge to the Self-Understanding of Humans 1016.1. Autonomous technology: challenges to our comprehension 1016.2. Robots that can make plans and Man’s self-image 1036.2.1. Planning robots 1036.2.2. Planning as special type of acting 1056.2.3. Step 1: Can robots act? 1076.2.4. Step 2: What do robots do when they plan? 1096.2.5. The difference between planning humans and planning robots 1136.3. Technology futures in robotics 1156.4. The hermeneutic view of robots 119Chapter 7. Enhancement as a Cipher of the Future 1237.1. Introduction and overview 1237.2. On the semantics of (technical) enhancement 1257.2.1. Enhancement as action 1257.2.2. Technical enhancement 1277.3. Human enhancement 1287.3.1. Enhancement in history: some ambivalences 1287.3.2. Human enhancement: some illustrations 1307.3.3. Healing, doping and enhancement 1327.3.4. Human enhancement: from visions to the marketplace 1367.4. Animal enhancement 1387.5. Conclusions 1427.5.1. Conclusions I: dissolving borders between humans, animals and technology 1427.5.2. Conclusions II: better understanding contemporary time 1447.5.3. Conclusions III: technicalizing the self-image of humans 1487.5.4. Conclusions IV: RRI debates on enhancement 1497.6. Enhancement as a cipher of the future 151Chapter 8. Technology to Combat Climate Change: the Hermeneutic Dimension of Climate Engineering 1538.1. Climate change and the ambivalence of technology 1538.2. Limitations of the previous approaches to finding a solution 1568.3. Climate engineering as a technical option 1578.4. Chances and risks of climate engineering 1598.5. The hermeneutics of climate engineering 1628.5.1. Climate engineering: revival of Baconism? 1638.5.2. Expanding the object of responsibility 1668.6. Epilogue: hermeneutic extension of the imperative of responsibility? 168Chapter 9. Hermeneutic Assessment: Toward an Interdisciplinary Research Program 1699.1. Assigning meaning to NEST as object of responsibility 1699.2. Hermeneutic approaches 1729.3. The emergence of NEST meaning: hermeneutic assessment 1759.3.1. The dynamics of assigning meaning 1759.3.2. NEST meaning: understanding origin and process 1789.3.3. NEST meaning: understanding content 1809.3.4. NEST meaning: understanding diffusion and impact 1839.4. Reflection and epilogue 185Inspiration Behind the Chapters 189Bibliography 191Index 215