Die unheimliche Verkehrung. Anmerkungen zu einem Topos der Moderne
Research output: Contributions to collected editions/works › Contributions to collected editions/anthologies › Research
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Autonomie und Unheimlichkeit. ed. / Alexander Friedrich; Petra Gehring; Christoph Hubig; Andreas Kaminski; Alfred Nordmann. Baden-Baden: Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2020. p. 53-82 (Jahrbuch für Technikphilosophie; Vol. 6).
Research output: Contributions to collected editions/works › Contributions to collected editions/anthologies › Research
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Die unheimliche Verkehrung.
T2 - Anmerkungen zu einem Topos der Moderne
AU - Voller, Christian
PY - 2020/1
Y1 - 2020/1
N2 - Is technological control taking the place of what appeared uncannily uncontrollable? Or is it itself becoming uncanny? Two seemingly contradictory narratives have shaped the history and theory of technology. The narrative of disenchantment describes how nature, experienced as something foreign and dangerous, was tamed by becoming scientific and mechanised. Secondly, the narrative of (re-)enchantment recounts how artefacts and technological possibilities become uncanny, especially by way of their seeming independence and by confronting us with an ‘autonomous’ logic of their own. In today's debates about self-learning, ubiquitous, invisible and opaque technologies, the uncanny moment resonates of a technology with ‘a life of its own’. Following up on the mechanisation and automation discourses of the 20th century, this contributes to the ‘demonisation’ of technology. On the one hand, technology makes the world familiar and comprehensible, e.g. by equating understanding with technical reconstruction. On the other hand, the technical reproduction of the world – or its radical transformation into an alienated one – is experienced as something disturbing. When artefacts appear to do ‘what they want’ or when large technical systems shape the world according to their ‘own logic’, a limit is reached that was already mentioned by Freud – we become uncertain whether we are still living in the modern world at all.
AB - Is technological control taking the place of what appeared uncannily uncontrollable? Or is it itself becoming uncanny? Two seemingly contradictory narratives have shaped the history and theory of technology. The narrative of disenchantment describes how nature, experienced as something foreign and dangerous, was tamed by becoming scientific and mechanised. Secondly, the narrative of (re-)enchantment recounts how artefacts and technological possibilities become uncanny, especially by way of their seeming independence and by confronting us with an ‘autonomous’ logic of their own. In today's debates about self-learning, ubiquitous, invisible and opaque technologies, the uncanny moment resonates of a technology with ‘a life of its own’. Following up on the mechanisation and automation discourses of the 20th century, this contributes to the ‘demonisation’ of technology. On the one hand, technology makes the world familiar and comprehensible, e.g. by equating understanding with technical reconstruction. On the other hand, the technical reproduction of the world – or its radical transformation into an alienated one – is experienced as something disturbing. When artefacts appear to do ‘what they want’ or when large technical systems shape the world according to their ‘own logic’, a limit is reached that was already mentioned by Freud – we become uncertain whether we are still living in the modern world at all.
KW - Medien- und Kommunikationswissenschaft
UR - http://d-nb.info/1198430443
U2 - 10.5771/9783748904861-53
DO - 10.5771/9783748904861-53
M3 - Aufsätze in Sammelwerken
SN - 978-3-8487-6395-5
T3 - Jahrbuch für Technikphilosophie
SP - 53
EP - 82
BT - Autonomie und Unheimlichkeit
A2 - Friedrich, Alexander
A2 - Gehring, Petra
A2 - Hubig, Christoph
A2 - Kaminski, Andreas
A2 - Nordmann, Alfred
PB - Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG
CY - Baden-Baden
ER -