This volume is a critical examination of the history and impact of automation on society. It provides perspectives on the history of automation and its relationship with power, emphasizing the importance of considering the social context in which automation is developed and used.
This volume is a critical examination of the history and impact of automation on society. It provides perspectives on the history of automation and its relationship with power, emphasizing the importance of considering the social context in which automation is developed and used.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Denisa Reshef Kera is a philosopher and designer, senior lecturer in the Science, Technology and Society at Bar Ilan University, Israel. She is the founder of a Design and Policy lab, Dando.design, which explores innovative and creative ways of embedding ethical program and regulatory norms into the fabric of technical infrastructures. Her commitment to public participation in science and technology is reflected in her unique projects. Her award-winning work Lithopy combines a fairy tale with functional code in a smart village that operates via satellites and blockchain services. Her academic career over the past decade includes University of Malta, Tel Aviv University, University of Salamanca, the National University of Singapore, Arizona State University, and Charles University in Prague, her hometown.
Inhaltsangabe
List of Figures ix Acknowledgments x PART I Introduction 1 1 Introduction 3 2 The Myth of Automation 13 PART II Governance over Rituals and Machines 23 3 Genealogy of Algorithmic Rule 25 4 From Rituals to Instruments 37 5 From Instruments to Governance Machines: Cosmology, Ontology, and Politics 46 6 Prototypes as Paradigms, Cosmoscopes, and Living Instruments 56 7 Future as Restoration or Transformation: Salomon's House, Academy of Games and Pleasures, and Hackerspaces 75 PART III Governance over Prototypes 89 8 From Governance over Rituals and Instruments to Governance over Prototypes 91 9 Grassroots Governance over Open Science Hardware 106 10 Public and Open Futures between Labor, Action, and Leisure 126 11 Global Prototypes for Local Futures 141 PART IV Governance over Exploratory Sandboxes 171 12 Experimental Governance over Metaphors, Prototypes, and Sandboxes 173 13 Governance 'Trading Zones': Exploratory Sandboxes 192 14 Experimental Algorithmic Citizenship 203 15 Conclusions 218 Afterword 223 References 228 Index 245
List of Figures ix Acknowledgments x PART I Introduction 1 1 Introduction 3 2 The Myth of Automation 13 PART II Governance over Rituals and Machines 23 3 Genealogy of Algorithmic Rule 25 4 From Rituals to Instruments 37 5 From Instruments to Governance Machines: Cosmology, Ontology, and Politics 46 6 Prototypes as Paradigms, Cosmoscopes, and Living Instruments 56 7 Future as Restoration or Transformation: Salomon's House, Academy of Games and Pleasures, and Hackerspaces 75 PART III Governance over Prototypes 89 8 From Governance over Rituals and Instruments to Governance over Prototypes 91 9 Grassroots Governance over Open Science Hardware 106 10 Public and Open Futures between Labor, Action, and Leisure 126 11 Global Prototypes for Local Futures 141 PART IV Governance over Exploratory Sandboxes 171 12 Experimental Governance over Metaphors, Prototypes, and Sandboxes 173 13 Governance 'Trading Zones': Exploratory Sandboxes 192 14 Experimental Algorithmic Citizenship 203 15 Conclusions 218 Afterword 223 References 228 Index 245
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