Affording Our Culture: “Smart” Technology and the Prospects for Creative Democracy

John Dewey, as Sidney Hook characterized him, was the philosopher of science and freedom. Dewey, as Larry Hickman has demonstrated, was also a philosopher of technology. And, as most people familiar with Dewey know, he was a philosopher of education and democracy. The complex of technology, science,...

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Main Author: Tibor Solymosi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Warsaw 2018-11-01
Series:Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eidos.uw.edu.pl/affording-our-culture-smart-technology-and-the-prospects-for-creative-democracy/
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author Tibor Solymosi
author_facet Tibor Solymosi
author_sort Tibor Solymosi
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description John Dewey, as Sidney Hook characterized him, was the philosopher of science and freedom. Dewey, as Larry Hickman has demonstrated, was also a philosopher of technology. And, as most people familiar with Dewey know, he was a philosopher of education and democracy. The complex of technology, science, freedom, education and democracy requires re-examination, not only because of our contemporary cultural political situation but also because of our growing insights into the human condition thanks to the technosciences of life, especially human life. Dewey’s philosophical method of reconstruction, equipped with insights from evolutionary neuroscience and ecological psychology, offers means of reconceiving and thus reevaluating our conception of tools and technology within our cultural context. I begin to take up Mark Tschaepe’s challenge to neuropragmatism to counter what he calls “dopamine democracy” – Plato’s critique of democracy resurrected in neural garb coupled with a critical examination of how social media and other so-called “smart” technologies undermine healthy democratic life. Central to this neuropragmatist approach are cultural affordances – opportunities for action humans have created initially for specific purposes and later retrofitted for other ends-in-view. Dewey’s reconstruction – as method as well as the reconstruction of technology, science, freedom, education and democracy as an entangled complex – is thus imagined as our best strategy for achieving the culture of creative democracy.
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spelling doaj.art-eeb982e4e7814bf4b99dd150b6b2e0f42022-12-21T19:00:35ZengUniversity of WarsawEidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture2544-302X2544-302X2018-11-0124466910.26319/6916Affording Our Culture: “Smart” Technology and the Prospects for Creative DemocracyTibor Solymosi0Department of Philosophy, Case Western Reserve UniversityJohn Dewey, as Sidney Hook characterized him, was the philosopher of science and freedom. Dewey, as Larry Hickman has demonstrated, was also a philosopher of technology. And, as most people familiar with Dewey know, he was a philosopher of education and democracy. The complex of technology, science, freedom, education and democracy requires re-examination, not only because of our contemporary cultural political situation but also because of our growing insights into the human condition thanks to the technosciences of life, especially human life. Dewey’s philosophical method of reconstruction, equipped with insights from evolutionary neuroscience and ecological psychology, offers means of reconceiving and thus reevaluating our conception of tools and technology within our cultural context. I begin to take up Mark Tschaepe’s challenge to neuropragmatism to counter what he calls “dopamine democracy” – Plato’s critique of democracy resurrected in neural garb coupled with a critical examination of how social media and other so-called “smart” technologies undermine healthy democratic life. Central to this neuropragmatist approach are cultural affordances – opportunities for action humans have created initially for specific purposes and later retrofitted for other ends-in-view. Dewey’s reconstruction – as method as well as the reconstruction of technology, science, freedom, education and democracy as an entangled complex – is thus imagined as our best strategy for achieving the culture of creative democracy.http://eidos.uw.edu.pl/affording-our-culture-smart-technology-and-the-prospects-for-creative-democracy/digital devicessocial mediademocracyneuropragmatismdopamineaffordancesneuroscience
spellingShingle Tibor Solymosi
Affording Our Culture: “Smart” Technology and the Prospects for Creative Democracy
Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture
digital devices
social media
democracy
neuropragmatism
dopamine
affordances
neuroscience
title Affording Our Culture: “Smart” Technology and the Prospects for Creative Democracy
title_full Affording Our Culture: “Smart” Technology and the Prospects for Creative Democracy
title_fullStr Affording Our Culture: “Smart” Technology and the Prospects for Creative Democracy
title_full_unstemmed Affording Our Culture: “Smart” Technology and the Prospects for Creative Democracy
title_short Affording Our Culture: “Smart” Technology and the Prospects for Creative Democracy
title_sort affording our culture smart technology and the prospects for creative democracy
topic digital devices
social media
democracy
neuropragmatism
dopamine
affordances
neuroscience
url http://eidos.uw.edu.pl/affording-our-culture-smart-technology-and-the-prospects-for-creative-democracy/
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