Thinking about the philosophy of technology
We have gotten so used to technology being part of our lives
and our experience of this world that if we remove just a few of them, it will significantly
alter not only our living operationally, but also the meaning that might come from its
removal.
The philosophy of technology, as a broad field of inquiry, grapples with the deep and often invisible integration, exploring questions about technological determinism, the mediation of human experience (Ritter, 2024), the relationship between technology and society, and the fundamental ways in which our tools shape who we are and how we understand the world.
I am narrowing my research scope to the area of technology as mediating human experience (“Mediation Theory,” 2016). It was only very recently revealed to me that technology might be seen as the manifestation of our relationship with the natural environment. This really exposes my ignorance, or rather my profoundly deep level of immersion in the technology-altered world, that I have taken technology for granted. I can possibly only appreciate the alternative view when the technology to which I am hyper accustomed to is removed, and then I’ll sure be forced to change my perspective and attitude towards my natural world.
This has led me to discover and read about Don Ihde’s contribution to this
broad area. He emphasised the need for empirical investigation into how
particular technologies mediate our experience of the world(“Technology and the Lifeworld,” n.d.). He insisted on looking at
actual artefacts and their roles in shaping human perception, action, and
understanding. I think, upon first glance that the unique combination of mixed reality digital twin (MRDT) hits
on the four human-technology relations, which is Ihde's framework for understanding
mediation: embodiment, hermeneutic, alterity and background relations.
Embodiment
Technology is experienced as part of the body, extending human perception/action.
Example: Eyeglasses, a blind person's cane
Schema: (human-technology) → world
How does the mixed reality interface become an extension of the user's perception and action within the hybrid physical-digital environment?
Hermeneutic
Technology represents or translates the world, requiring interpretation by the human.
Example: MRI scans, thermometers
Schema: human → (technology-world)
How do the digital twin elements serve as representations that users interpret to understand the real-world entity they mirror?
Alterity
Technology is interacted with as a quasi-other, with the world in the background.
Example: ATMs, robots, vending machines
Schema: human → technology (world)
In what ways do users interact with the digital twin as a distinct entity within the mixed reality space?
Background Technology
forms the context or environment for human experience, often unnoticed.
Example: Lighting, heating, ambient sounds
Schema: human (technology/world)
How does the presence of the mixed reality
environment and the digital twin subtly shape the user's overall experience and
understanding of the real and virtual?
If I can focus my research question further, I would really like to investigate how MRDT technology mediates the human and their environment. MRDT as being the mediator and the background. It really is multi-faceted in its characteristics. It is also the focus as well as the medium in which we interpret it. I will need to properly select and justify my methodology to extract the information I need.
Data collection methods
In order for me to properly capture the experience accounts
and see them through Ihde’s framework for understanding mediation, I need to
have a robust data-collection method/s. To further strengthen this, I would like
to employ methodological triangulation. It will at least allow me to
cross-validate my findings and mitigate each method’s inherent biases. Not to
mention a more comprehensive understanding by capturing different nuances and
facets of the experience.
I would prefer to have at least 3 methods to accurately TRI-angulate the data. So far, the following methods are currently deemed as the most appropriate:
Semi-structured interviews
Multi-perspective camera
Optional method 3 - Participant Observation
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References
Mediation Theory. (2016, March 6). Peter-Paul Verbeek. https://ppverbeek.org/mediation-theory/
Ritter, M. (2024). 5. Technological Mediation without Empirical Borders. In B. De Boer & J. Zwier (Eds.), Phenomenology and the Philosophy of Technology (1st ed., pp. 121–142). Open Book Publishers. https://doi.org/10.11647/obp.0421.05
Technology and the Lifeworld. (n.d.). Indiana University Press. Retrieved April 18, 2025, from https://iupress.org/9780253205605/technology-and-the-lifeworld/
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