Technology and the Good Life: Suggestions for a Theological Turn in the Philosophy of Technology

About Technology and the Good Life: Suggestions for a Theological Turn in the Philosophy of Technology

Authors Lewin, David
Date 2011
Publication Technu00e9: Research in Philosophy and Technology
Vol / Pages Vol. 15 No. 2 pp. 82-95
DOI 10.5840/techne20111529
URL http://www.pdcnet.org/oom/service?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=&rft.imuse_id=techne_2011_0015_0002_0082_0095&svc_id=info:www.pdcnet.org/collection
Language en

Type: Journal Article

Abstract

This essay argues that a purely secular philosophy of technology omits an essential aspect of technical activity: the ultimate concern for which any action is undertaken. By way of an analysis of Borgmann and Hickman, I show that the philosophy of technology cannot articulate the nature of the good life without reference to an ultimacy beyond finite human goods. This paradoxically implies that human beings desire something infinite which they cannot name, a paradox that theologians have long understood in terms of a theological dialectic.

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