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Thinking through Science and Technology

Philosophy, Religion, and Politics in an Engineered World

Edited by Glen Miller; Helena Mateus Jerónimo and Qin Zhu

Groundbreaking in its range of disciplines and cultural backgrounds, Thinking through Science and Technology explores how individual and societal beliefs, values, and actions are transformed by science, technology, and engineering. Practical and theoretical insights from philosophers, policymakers, STS scholars, and engineers illuminate the promise, perils, and paradoxes that arise with technoscientific change. This collection of original research develops a philosophical understanding of technology and its inscription in a wider web of social and political meanings, values, and civilizational change. It explores foundational beliefs at the core of engineering education and practice, with an emphasis on the movement of ideas between Western and Chinese scholars, as well as the complex interwoven relationship between ideas from religion, science, and technology as they have evolved in the West. Contributors also critically examine the forces and frameworks that shape the development and evaluation of scientific practice and the innovation and adoption of technology, with an emphasis on national and global policy. The volume offers a critical and timely reflection on science and technology that counters trends toward technological optimism, on the one hand, and disciplinary and cultural regionalization, on the other. Chapters written by prominent and promising scholars from around the world make this a global resource; its breadth and clarity make it a superb introduction for those new to its fields. It serves as an essential reference for established scholars as well as anyone seeking a more comprehensive understanding of social and technoscientific entanglements that permeate contemporary life.

List of contributors: Gordon Akon-Yamga, Jennifer Karns Alexander, Andoni Alonso, Pamela Andanda, Larry Arnhart, Li Bocong, Albert Borgmann, Adam Briggle, Jose A. López Cerezo, Mark Coeckelbergh, Daniel Cérézuelle, Neelke Doorn, Jean-Pierre Dupuy, Andrew Feenberg, Jose Luís Garcia, Tricia Glazebrook, Janna van Grunsven, J. Britt Holbrook, Helena Jerónimo, Tong LI, Yongmou LIU, Lavinia Marin, Glen Miller, Carl Mitcham, Suzanne Moon, Byron Newberry, Jean Robert, Sabine Roeser, Taylor Stone, Sajay Samuel, Daniel Sarewitz, Jen Schneider, José Antonio Ullate, Carlos Verdugo-Serna, Nan WANG.

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Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 582 • Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-1-5381-7650-4 • Hardback • March 2023 • $165.00 • (£127.00)
978-1-5381-7651-1 • Paperback • February 2025 • $42.99 • (£35.00)
Subjects: Technology & Engineering / Social Aspects, Philosophy / Ethics & Moral Philosophy, Social Science / Technology Studies

Glen Miller is instructional associate professor of philosophy at Texas A&M University. He has co-edited Reimagining Philosophy and Technology, Reinventing Ihde (with Ashley Shew).

Helena Mateus Jerónimo is assistant professor in the School of Economics and Management (ISEG), Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal. She has edited Portuguese Philosophy of Technology and is a member of the UNESCO World Commission on the Ethics of Science and Technology.

Qin Zhu is associate professor of engineering education at Virginia Tech. He is the lead author of the 5th edition of Ethics in Engineering.

Foreword

Carl Mitcham

Preface

Glen Miller, Helena Mateus Jerónimo, and Qin Zhu

Chapter 1: Editors' Introduction

Glen Miller, Helena Mateus Jerónimo, and Qin Zhu

Part I: Philosophy and Technology

Ch 2: The Enigma of Technology

Andrew Feenberg

Chapter 3: Organization as Technique: A Blind Spot in the Philosophy of Technology

Daniel Cérézuelle, translation by Christian Roy

Chapter 4: Technology as Process

Mark Coeckelbergh

Chapter 5: Political Philosophy of Technology: After Leo Strauss

Carl Mitcham

Chapter 6: The Nuclear Menace and the Prophecy of Doom

Jean-Pierre Dupuy

Chapter 7: The End of Technology and the Renewal of Reality

Albert Borgmann

Part II: Philosophy and Engineering

Chapter 8: An Engineer Considers Technological (Non)Neutrality: “But Where Are the Values?

Byron Newberry

Chapter 9: How Engineers Can Care from a Distance: Promoting Moral Sensitivity in Engineering Ethics Education

Janna van Grunsven, Lavinia Marin, Taylor Stone, Sabine Roeser & Neelke Doorn

Chapter 10: Parallel Steps toward Philosophy of Engineering in China and West

Nan WANG and LI Bocong

Chapter 11: The Development of the Philosophy of Engineering in China: Engaging the Scholarship of Carl Mitcham

Tong LI and Yongmou LIU

Part III: Religion, Science, and Technology

Chapter 12: Christianity, Power, and Technological Domination: A Typological Approach to the Church

José Antonio Ullate

Chapter 13: Technology in Cosmic Terms: The World Council of Churches in Amsterdam, 1948

Jennifer Karns Alexander

Chapter 14: Beyond Tools, Means, and Ends: Explorations into the Post-Instrumental Erehwon

Jean Robert

Chapter 15: Understanding Bureaucratic Order: The Theological Paradigms of Modern Hierarchy

Sajay Samuel

Chapter 16: What Religion, What Technology? A Wittgensteinian Approach

Andoni Alonso

Chapter 17: Bioethics, Philosophy, and Religious Wisdom: A Critical Assessment of Leon Kass’s Thought

Larry Arnhart

Part IV: Science and Technology Studies

Chapter 18: Ethics and the Search for Scientific Knowledge: The Whole Truth and Nothing but the Truth?

Carlos Verdugo-Serna

Chapter 19: A Short History of Science, Truth, and Politics in the United States, 1945–2021

Daniel Sarewitz

Chapter 20: Moral Narratives of Technological Change in the Early Green Revolution

Suzanne Moon

Chapter 21: Momentum, Interrupted: Developing Habits of Discernment in Engineering and Beyond

Jen Schneider

Chapter 22: Innovation Policy Driven by the Market: The Second Great Disembeddedness

José Luís Garcia

Part V: Science and Technology Policy

Chapter 23: Irrational Energy Ethics

Adam Briggle

Chapter 24: Paradoxical Policy in Sub-Saharan Africa: Women’s Farming, Oil, and Sustainable Development

Tricia Glazebrook and Gordon Akon-Yamga

Chapter 25: The Pandemic and Clamor for Vaccines: Ethical-Legal Considerations for Intellectual Property Rights and Technology Sharing

Pamela Andanda

Chapter 26: An Effective History of the Basic-Applied Distinction in “Science” Policy

J. Britt Holbrook

Chapter 27: Technological Risks, Institutional Wariness, and the Dynamics of Trust

José A. López Cerezo

About the Contributors

Index

About the Editors

Carl Mitcham is a founding figure of the philosophy of engineering and technology. His long career has produced landmark works such as his 1994 exploration of the "path between engineering and philosophy," Thinking through Technology (CH,Mar'95, 32-3863). The editors of this work acknowledge their debt to Mitcham as an inspiration for the interdisciplinary essays included in their collection. Scholars from China, Holland, and Mexico join with others from Europe and the US in this volume to examine a staggering variety of topics, ranging from subsistence farming by Ghanaian women to the roots of modern technological power as found in the Hebrew Old Testament. The editors have maintained high standards of quality and language throughout, so that nearly every essay could be the subject of a fruitful graduate philosophy seminar. The six essays in the "Religion, Science, and Technology" section explore issues seldom examined in mainstream engineering ethics works. While none of the essays is a particularly easy read, they all reward close study by the interested reader. Taken together, they provide an encyclopedic view of the relatively new field of engineering philosophy broadly defined and should prove invaluable to anyone who is seriously studying this field at the graduate level. Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates. Graduate students, faculty, and professionals. General readers.


— Choice Reviews


Thinking Through Science and Technology is a rich and urgently-needed contribution to our understanding of the built world and our vital human bonds with it. By moving across the boundaries of discipline, tradition and region, while joining newer voices with those of foundational leaders in science and technology studies, Miller, Jerónimo and Zhu open up fertile ground for exploration of the past, present and future of human-technology relations.


— Shannon Vallor, The University of Edinburgh


Thinking through Science and Technology is the ultimate handbook for understanding the human condition in terms of the past, present and future of technology. It is also a testimony to Carl Mitcham, whose work and example provide the intellectual platform for these essays, by authors from across the globe. Readers will learn something new from each of them, and some—such as Jean-Pierre Dupuy’s and Adam Briggle’s—are gems in their own right.


— Steve Fuller, Auguste Comte Chair in Social Epistemology, University of Warwick, author of Nietzschean Meditations: Untimely Thoughts at the Dawn of the Transhuman Era


Three decades ago, Carl Mitcham created the core of philosophy of technology, and now Miller, Jerónimo and Zhu’s volume Thinking through Science and Technology proves the impressive richness and ongoing societal importance of work that builds on that core. A must-read and excellent guide to state-of-the-art thinking about technology.


— Pieter Vermaas, Delft University of Technology


In a perfectly undogmatic manner Thinking through Science and Technology offers a broad survey of problems and approaches in contemporary philosophy of technology. Coming from many countries, representing very different intellectual traditions, what the contributors share is a sense of passion, if not urgency. The path is short from foundational reflections and laboratory work to everyday questions of how to live in times of crisis. Embarked on this path, what we need is the kind of curiosity and openness to dialogue which this diverse group of contributors brings to the volume.


— Alfred Nordmann, Technische Universitat Darmstadt


Thinking through Science and Technology

Philosophy, Religion, and Politics in an Engineered World

Cover Image
Hardback
Paperback
Summary
Summary
  • Groundbreaking in its range of disciplines and cultural backgrounds, Thinking through Science and Technology explores how individual and societal beliefs, values, and actions are transformed by science, technology, and engineering. Practical and theoretical insights from philosophers, policymakers, STS scholars, and engineers illuminate the promise, perils, and paradoxes that arise with technoscientific change. This collection of original research develops a philosophical understanding of technology and its inscription in a wider web of social and political meanings, values, and civilizational change. It explores foundational beliefs at the core of engineering education and practice, with an emphasis on the movement of ideas between Western and Chinese scholars, as well as the complex interwoven relationship between ideas from religion, science, and technology as they have evolved in the West. Contributors also critically examine the forces and frameworks that shape the development and evaluation of scientific practice and the innovation and adoption of technology, with an emphasis on national and global policy. The volume offers a critical and timely reflection on science and technology that counters trends toward technological optimism, on the one hand, and disciplinary and cultural regionalization, on the other. Chapters written by prominent and promising scholars from around the world make this a global resource; its breadth and clarity make it a superb introduction for those new to its fields. It serves as an essential reference for established scholars as well as anyone seeking a more comprehensive understanding of social and technoscientific entanglements that permeate contemporary life.

    List of contributors: Gordon Akon-Yamga, Jennifer Karns Alexander, Andoni Alonso, Pamela Andanda, Larry Arnhart, Li Bocong, Albert Borgmann, Adam Briggle, Jose A. López Cerezo, Mark Coeckelbergh, Daniel Cérézuelle, Neelke Doorn, Jean-Pierre Dupuy, Andrew Feenberg, Jose Luís Garcia, Tricia Glazebrook, Janna van Grunsven, J. Britt Holbrook, Helena Jerónimo, Tong LI, Yongmou LIU, Lavinia Marin, Glen Miller, Carl Mitcham, Suzanne Moon, Byron Newberry, Jean Robert, Sabine Roeser, Taylor Stone, Sajay Samuel, Daniel Sarewitz, Jen Schneider, José Antonio Ullate, Carlos Verdugo-Serna, Nan WANG.

Details
Details
  • Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
    Pages: 582 • Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
    978-1-5381-7650-4 • Hardback • March 2023 • $165.00 • (£127.00)
    978-1-5381-7651-1 • Paperback • February 2025 • $42.99 • (£35.00)
    Subjects: Technology & Engineering / Social Aspects, Philosophy / Ethics & Moral Philosophy, Social Science / Technology Studies
Author
Author
  • Glen Miller is instructional associate professor of philosophy at Texas A&M University. He has co-edited Reimagining Philosophy and Technology, Reinventing Ihde (with Ashley Shew).

    Helena Mateus Jerónimo is assistant professor in the School of Economics and Management (ISEG), Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal. She has edited Portuguese Philosophy of Technology and is a member of the UNESCO World Commission on the Ethics of Science and Technology.

    Qin Zhu is associate professor of engineering education at Virginia Tech. He is the lead author of the 5th edition of Ethics in Engineering.

Table of Contents
Table of Contents
  • Foreword

    Carl Mitcham

    Preface

    Glen Miller, Helena Mateus Jerónimo, and Qin Zhu

    Chapter 1: Editors' Introduction

    Glen Miller, Helena Mateus Jerónimo, and Qin Zhu

    Part I: Philosophy and Technology

    Ch 2: The Enigma of Technology

    Andrew Feenberg

    Chapter 3: Organization as Technique: A Blind Spot in the Philosophy of Technology

    Daniel Cérézuelle, translation by Christian Roy

    Chapter 4: Technology as Process

    Mark Coeckelbergh

    Chapter 5: Political Philosophy of Technology: After Leo Strauss

    Carl Mitcham

    Chapter 6: The Nuclear Menace and the Prophecy of Doom

    Jean-Pierre Dupuy

    Chapter 7: The End of Technology and the Renewal of Reality

    Albert Borgmann

    Part II: Philosophy and Engineering

    Chapter 8: An Engineer Considers Technological (Non)Neutrality: “But Where Are the Values?

    Byron Newberry

    Chapter 9: How Engineers Can Care from a Distance: Promoting Moral Sensitivity in Engineering Ethics Education

    Janna van Grunsven, Lavinia Marin, Taylor Stone, Sabine Roeser & Neelke Doorn

    Chapter 10: Parallel Steps toward Philosophy of Engineering in China and West

    Nan WANG and LI Bocong

    Chapter 11: The Development of the Philosophy of Engineering in China: Engaging the Scholarship of Carl Mitcham

    Tong LI and Yongmou LIU

    Part III: Religion, Science, and Technology

    Chapter 12: Christianity, Power, and Technological Domination: A Typological Approach to the Church

    José Antonio Ullate

    Chapter 13: Technology in Cosmic Terms: The World Council of Churches in Amsterdam, 1948

    Jennifer Karns Alexander

    Chapter 14: Beyond Tools, Means, and Ends: Explorations into the Post-Instrumental Erehwon

    Jean Robert

    Chapter 15: Understanding Bureaucratic Order: The Theological Paradigms of Modern Hierarchy

    Sajay Samuel

    Chapter 16: What Religion, What Technology? A Wittgensteinian Approach

    Andoni Alonso

    Chapter 17: Bioethics, Philosophy, and Religious Wisdom: A Critical Assessment of Leon Kass’s Thought

    Larry Arnhart

    Part IV: Science and Technology Studies

    Chapter 18: Ethics and the Search for Scientific Knowledge: The Whole Truth and Nothing but the Truth?

    Carlos Verdugo-Serna

    Chapter 19: A Short History of Science, Truth, and Politics in the United States, 1945–2021

    Daniel Sarewitz

    Chapter 20: Moral Narratives of Technological Change in the Early Green Revolution

    Suzanne Moon

    Chapter 21: Momentum, Interrupted: Developing Habits of Discernment in Engineering and Beyond

    Jen Schneider

    Chapter 22: Innovation Policy Driven by the Market: The Second Great Disembeddedness

    José Luís Garcia

    Part V: Science and Technology Policy

    Chapter 23: Irrational Energy Ethics

    Adam Briggle

    Chapter 24: Paradoxical Policy in Sub-Saharan Africa: Women’s Farming, Oil, and Sustainable Development

    Tricia Glazebrook and Gordon Akon-Yamga

    Chapter 25: The Pandemic and Clamor for Vaccines: Ethical-Legal Considerations for Intellectual Property Rights and Technology Sharing

    Pamela Andanda

    Chapter 26: An Effective History of the Basic-Applied Distinction in “Science” Policy

    J. Britt Holbrook

    Chapter 27: Technological Risks, Institutional Wariness, and the Dynamics of Trust

    José A. López Cerezo

    About the Contributors

    Index

    About the Editors

Reviews
Reviews
  • Carl Mitcham is a founding figure of the philosophy of engineering and technology. His long career has produced landmark works such as his 1994 exploration of the "path between engineering and philosophy," Thinking through Technology (CH,Mar'95, 32-3863). The editors of this work acknowledge their debt to Mitcham as an inspiration for the interdisciplinary essays included in their collection. Scholars from China, Holland, and Mexico join with others from Europe and the US in this volume to examine a staggering variety of topics, ranging from subsistence farming by Ghanaian women to the roots of modern technological power as found in the Hebrew Old Testament. The editors have maintained high standards of quality and language throughout, so that nearly every essay could be the subject of a fruitful graduate philosophy seminar. The six essays in the "Religion, Science, and Technology" section explore issues seldom examined in mainstream engineering ethics works. While none of the essays is a particularly easy read, they all reward close study by the interested reader. Taken together, they provide an encyclopedic view of the relatively new field of engineering philosophy broadly defined and should prove invaluable to anyone who is seriously studying this field at the graduate level. Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates. Graduate students, faculty, and professionals. General readers.


    — Choice Reviews


    Thinking Through Science and Technology is a rich and urgently-needed contribution to our understanding of the built world and our vital human bonds with it. By moving across the boundaries of discipline, tradition and region, while joining newer voices with those of foundational leaders in science and technology studies, Miller, Jerónimo and Zhu open up fertile ground for exploration of the past, present and future of human-technology relations.


    — Shannon Vallor, The University of Edinburgh


    Thinking through Science and Technology is the ultimate handbook for understanding the human condition in terms of the past, present and future of technology. It is also a testimony to Carl Mitcham, whose work and example provide the intellectual platform for these essays, by authors from across the globe. Readers will learn something new from each of them, and some—such as Jean-Pierre Dupuy’s and Adam Briggle’s—are gems in their own right.


    — Steve Fuller, Auguste Comte Chair in Social Epistemology, University of Warwick, author of Nietzschean Meditations: Untimely Thoughts at the Dawn of the Transhuman Era


    Three decades ago, Carl Mitcham created the core of philosophy of technology, and now Miller, Jerónimo and Zhu’s volume Thinking through Science and Technology proves the impressive richness and ongoing societal importance of work that builds on that core. A must-read and excellent guide to state-of-the-art thinking about technology.


    — Pieter Vermaas, Delft University of Technology


    In a perfectly undogmatic manner Thinking through Science and Technology offers a broad survey of problems and approaches in contemporary philosophy of technology. Coming from many countries, representing very different intellectual traditions, what the contributors share is a sense of passion, if not urgency. The path is short from foundational reflections and laboratory work to everyday questions of how to live in times of crisis. Embarked on this path, what we need is the kind of curiosity and openness to dialogue which this diverse group of contributors brings to the volume.


    — Alfred Nordmann, Technische Universitat Darmstadt


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