Spelling suggestions: "subject:"existenzphilosophie"" "subject:"friedensphilosophie""
1 |
Inverse motion of thinking: On technoscience, gesture, and writingKrtilova, Katerina 12 July 2017 (has links)
Although Flusser speaks about a ‘theory of gestures’, presented in the volume Gestures, his approach can hardly be called a theory. It defines neither subject matter — his examples range from movements of hands to revolutionary movements — nor method. Flusser's approach is however close to media philosophy. The gesture is not an ‘object’ that can be observed as independent from the act of observation. Flusser’s gestures are essentially performative — performing gestures of thinking, which are in the world, and not standing “above”, looking at the world from an objective viewpoint. Flusser’s questions refer to a long philosophical tradition with a specific twist: thinking about and interfering with a technical world.
|
2 |
DIGAREC Keynote-Lectures 2009/10Aarseth, Espen, Manovich, Lev, Mäyrä, Frans, Salen, Katie, Wolf, Mark J. P. January 2011 (has links)
The sixth volume of the DIGAREC Series holds the contributions to the DIGAREC Keynote-Lectures given at the University of Potsdam in the winter semester 2009/10. With contributions by Mark J.P. Wolf (Concordia University Wisconsin), Espen Aarseth (Center for Computer Games Research, IT University of Copenhagen), Katie Salen (Parsons New School of Design, New York), Laura Ermi and Frans Mäyrä (University of Tampere), and Lev Manovich (University of Southern California, San Diego).
|
Page generated in 0.0611 seconds