Title: The Question Concerning Technology
1Martin Heidegger
- The Question Concerning Technology
- With thanks to Professor B. Babich, Fordham
University
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4 - Technology is not the same as, not equivalent to
the essence of technology - the essence of technology is by no means
anything technological - But, and here Heidegger invokes Rousseau,
indirectly to be sure - Everywhere we remain unfree and chained to
technology - This constraint is true whether we passionately
affirm or deny it ((311))
5 - But we are delivered over to it in the worst
possible way when we regard it as something
neutral - According to traditional philosophy, we can ask
the question of essence by asking what
something is. - Technology is
- a means to an end Instrumental definition
- a human activity -- Anthropological definition
- Both definitions are correct but the correct is
not the same as the true (312)
6Controlling Technology
- We seek to master technology
- I.e., as Heidegger says, we seek to get
technology spiritually in hand. The will to
mastery becomes all the more urgent the more
technology threatens to slip from human control.
- This is problematic in the event (and Heidegger
will defend this point) that technology might be
something other than a mere means - We need a free relation to technology
- And we can seek the true by way of the correct.
7The Four Causes (313-4)
- causa materialis --- hyle -- the material
- causa formalis --- eidos the form or shape
- Causa finalis -- telos that for which it is for
- causa efficiens
- not quite translatable, this would be the logos,
but Heidegger seeks to explore this in terms of
the working circumspection of the worker
8causa efficiens (315-316)
- For us today this is the exclusive meaning of
causality - Aristotles exploration of the fourfold nature of
causality is thus alien to us - Heidegger explores this in terms of language (our
English word is indebted to the latin) - German Ursache, Latin, causa, Greek aition
9The Craftsman Silversmith here (315)
- The German überlegen (which Heidegger interprets
to mean something like bring about by
reflecting)--- renders the Greek ????? for
Heidegger and corresponds to in Latin letters
now, apo-phainesthai, to bring forth into
appearance - This can best be illustrated with reference to
Heideggers discussion of the tool in his first
and most important work, Being and Time
10Tools, of a kind
11Hammering
- Holding a hammer properly enables one to use the
hammer to accomplish what one has to do with the
hammer. But this is other than bending the hammer
to one's own will. The hammer will do best what
one will if one conforms one's use to the
intrinsic design of the hammer, heft, shape, etc.
(conformity with respect to the appropriate grip,
the angle and arc of the swinging stroke, even
the kind of nail employed, surely the position of
the same). In the case of hammering, there is
always a great bit of freedom -- one can use the
side of the hammer's head or the shaft for
hammering if it is a claw hammer and one is a
performance artist, say, one can use the sharp
edge of the claw. But even here the condition of
the range of use is 'decided' or constrained by
the tool and the task even in the last unlikely
because (not albeit) unwieldy case. This is what
Heidegger in Being and Time referred to as
equipmental totality (SZ 68). With more
sophisticated machines, anything mechanically
driven for example, especially all things
electronic, the range of play is increasingly
reduced. - B. Babich in British Journal of Phenomenology.
30/1 (January 1999) 106
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13The Four Causes Didactic Illustration
14Verschuldetsein
- That to which something else is indebted (316)
- This is Heideggers key reflection on techne as
bringing forth in and through an other, en alloi,
and as distinguished from - physis, understood as bursting into bloom,
unfolding from itself (37) 1
15Revealing
- Every bringing forth is grounded in revealing
- Thus Heidegger here makes clear (p. 317) that
technology is no mere means but a mode or
revealing, that is, of bringing forth into
unconcealment aletheia (318-9) - In this sense, techne is something poietic
- And as Heidegger emphasizes techne is also a kind
of knowing or episteme
16The essence of modern technology
- Not a bringing forth (in the sense of poiesis)
- Too impatient/violent/urgent we might note here
that this violence applies as much to the
information-age as to the machine-age - Instead it is what Heidegger calls a challenging
forth into revealing (320)
17Setting Upon
- The setting upon characteristic of modern
technology challenges forth the energy of nature
as an expediting in two ways - Unlocks and exposes (Physics sets nature up
(321)) - And the economic maximum yield, minimum expense
demands stockpiling - The result Heidegger calls Bestand (332)
standing reserve which is far more than simply
reserves that one happens to have on
handVorrat
18Examples of such setting upon
Hydroelectric plant (and environs)
19Strip mining
20Two windmill typs
Even the wind can be set upon.
Great birds of prey, 1000s and 1000s of them,
who cannot see the churning vanes accumulate
around the circumference of such wind-farms
(USA Today 25/1/2004)
21Süleymans Bridge at Mostar, first built in 1566
22Mostar Bridge, 1993
23Rebuilt as a tourist attraction
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25Heideggers reference point
26Gestell - Enframing
- Gathered by the challenging that sets upon the
human being in order to reveal the real as
standing reserve in accord with appearances - Heidegger coins the term Ge-Stell (324) on the
model (a rather elusive one on the first reading)
of Gebirge (the chaining of mountain ranges) and
Gemut (what disposes one in ones disposition) - The Ge-stell is a putting into a framework or
configuration as standing reserve of everything
that is summoned forth (325)
27Setting Upon
- The challenging claim which gathers man thither
to order the self-revealing (this would be
nature) in the mode or guise of so much standing
reserve - This should not be equated with the array of
technological apparatus in our world (329 It is
the way in which the acutal reveals itself as
standing reserve.) - This becomes the way on which we are embarked
our destiny (329)
28Ackerbau Zitat Example from Agriculture
- Ein Landstrich wird gestellt An area is
en-framed
29 The context for the Ackerbau quote
- Ein Landstrich wird gestellt, auf Kohle nämlich
und Erze, die in ihm anstehen. Das Anstehen von
Gestein ist vermutlich schon im Gesichtskreis
eines solchen Stellens vorgestellt und auch nur
aus ihm vorstellbar. Das anstehende und als
solches schon auf ein Sichstellen abgeschätzte
Gestein wird herausgefordert und demzufolge
herausgefördert.
30Das Anstehen von Gestein ist vermutlich schon im
Gesichtskreis eines solchen Stellens vorgestellt
und auch nur aus ihm vorstellbar.
31Das anstehende und als solches schon auf
ein Sichstellen abgeschätzte Gestein wird
herausgefordert und demzufolge herausgefördert.
32 - Durch ein solches Bestellen wird das Land zu
einem Kohlenrevier, der Boden zu einer
Erlagererstätte Note Heideggers later marginal
comment Der Boden, Land heimatlose des
Bestandes!
33 Note the comparison between atomic energy and
agricultural industry
- Bestellen ist schon andere Art als jenes wodurch
vormals der Bauer seinen Acker bestellte. Das
bäuerliche Tun fordert den Ackerboden nicht
heraus es giebt vielmehr die Saat den
Wachstumskräften anheim es hütet sie in ihr
Gedeihen. Inzwischen ist jedoch auch die
Feldbestellung in das gleiche Be-stellen
ubergegangen, das die Luft und auf Stickstoff,
den Boden auf Kohle und Erze stellt, das Erz auf
Uran, das Uran auf Atomenergie, diese auf
bestellbare Zerstörung - Cultivating is now a different kind of thing than
what the farmer used to do with his field. The
famers activity did not challenge his field he
entrusted his seeds much more to the power of
growing. They were protected in their development
for good or worse. In the meantime, the fields
have come to be cultivated in the same manner as
is nitrogen is destructively extracted from air,
as coal and ore are from the earth, as uranium
from ore, as atomic energy from uranium.
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35Im Wesen das selbe wie
- Ackerbau ist jetzt motorisierte
Ernährungsindustrie, im Wesen das Selbe wie die
Fabrikation von Leichen in Gaskammern und
Vernichtungslagern, das Selbe wie die Blockade
und Aushungerung von Ländern, das selbe wie die
Fabrikation von Wasserstoffbomben. - Agriculture is now a motorized feeding-industry,
essentially the same as the fabrication of
corpses in gas chambers and the death camps, the
same as the blockade and starvation of countries,
the same as the making of hydrogen bombs.
36 Heideggers claim is that such a manufacture of
corpses is in essence the sameas strip mining,
factory farming, etc.
37 - But where danger is, grows
- The saving power also.
- Friedrich Hölderlin (333)
One must raise a further question, beyond
questioning after technology to raise the
question of what Heidegger, who thinks the danger
Gefahr together with the notion of Ge-Stell,
might mean by speaking of Hölderlins saving
power das Rettende.
38See The Origin of the Work of Art here he
continues
- Because the essence of technology is nothing
technological, essential reflection upon
technology and decisive confrontation with it
must happen in a realm that is, one the one hand,
akin to the essence of technology and, on the
other, fundamentally different from it. - Such a realm is art. But only if reflection upon
art, for its part, does not shut its eyes to the
constellation of truth, concerning which we are
questioning For questioning is the piety of
thought. (340-341)
39 - The essence of technology is nothing
technological - Heidegger
40Heideggers grave, St. Martins Church Graveyard,
Messkirch