超越技术调解:规范实践方法

C. B. Burken
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引用次数: 4

摘要

一些技术哲学家认为,技术可以调节人类的行为。例如,在后现象学的分支中,Don Ihde和Peter-Paul Verbeek等作者从技术的道德(在Verbeek中更突出)以及技术改变我们对自己和世界的感知(在Ihde中更突出)的意义上描述了技术的中介方面。在本文中,介绍、批评和丰富了现有的不同类型的中介。这四种类型是通过参考军事高科技环境来说明的,重点是视觉数据和成像技术。这些技术可以(1)通过邀请某些行为,(2)通过放大和减少,(3)通过内置规范,(4)通过解释来调解行动。这四种类型的中介主要关注技术或技术工件本身。然而,这些方法没有抓住的是大多数技术发挥作用的特定用户实践。在本文中,本文认为,为了更充分地理解技术的中介方面,应该注意技术发挥作用的特定用户环境。因此,本文以规范实践为视角,对不同类型的技术中介进行分析,从而丰富对技术中介四种类型的理解。2009年在阿富汗发生的昆都士空袭事件中,一种名为Rover的视觉数据共享设备发挥了重要作用。本文使用这个案例来说明技术如何在军事实践中调解人类行为。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Beyond Technological Mediation: A Normative Practice Approach
Several philosophers of technology have argued that technology mediates human actions. For example, in the branch of post-phenomenology, authors such as Don Ihde and Peter-Paul Verbeek have described the mediating aspects of technology in terms of morality of technology (more prominent in Verbeek) as well as in the sense that technology changes our perception of ourselves and the world (more prominent in Ihde). In this article, different existing types of mediation are presented, critiqued, and enriched. The four types are illustrated by referring to military high-Tech environments with a focus on visual data and imaging technologies. These technologies can mediate actions (1) by inviting certain behavior, (2) through amplification and reduction, (3) through built-in norms, and (4) through interpretation. The four types of mediation mainly focus on the technology or technological artifact itself. What these approaches fail to grasp, however, is the specific user practices in which most technologies function. In this article, it is argued that to understand the mediating aspects of technology more fully, attention should be paid to the specific user context in which the technology functions. Therefore, an enriched understanding of the four types of mediation of technology is proposed by taking the lens of normative practices and analyzing the different types of mediation through this lens. The Kunduz Airstrike Incident, which took place in 2009 in Afghanistan, is a case in which a visual data sharing device called Rover played a prominent role. This case is used in this article to illustrate how technology mediates human actions in military practice.
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