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El. knyga: Postphenomenology and Imaging: How to Read Technology

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How should we understand the experience of encountering and interpreting images? What are their roles in science and medicine? How do they shape everyday life? Postphenomenology and Imaging: How to Read Technology brings together scholars from multiple disciplines to investigate these questions. The contributors make use of the postphenomenological philosophical perspective, applying its distinctive ideas to the study of how images are experienced. These essays offer both philosophical analysis of our conception of images and empirical studies of imaging practice. The contributors analyze concrete examples from a variety of fields of science and medicine, including radiology, neuroscience, cytology, physics, remote sensing, and space science. They also include examples of imaging in everyday life, from smartphone apps to animated GIFs. Edited by Samantha J. Fried and Robert Rosenberger, this collection includes an extensive primer chapter introducing and expanding the postphenomenological account of imaging, as well as a set of short pieces by critical respondents: prominent scholars who may not self-identify as doing postphenomenology but whose adjacent work is illuminating.
Introduction ix
Samantha J. Fried
Robert Rosenberger
SECTION 1 Primer
1 A Primer on Postphenomenology and Image Reading
3(96)
Robert Rosenberger
SECTION 2 Postphenomenological Thought Experiments: Multiplying Multiples
2 Affect in the Age of the Image: The gif Use Case
99(20)
Stacey O. Irwin
3 Science Comes Late to Sonification
119(8)
Don Ihde
4 Radiology as Skillful Coping and Enactive Hermeneutics: A Critique of Representations and Corresponding Truth
127(24)
Jan Kyrre Berg Friis
SECTION 3 Embodied Postphenomenology: Ethnographies of the Interactive Multiple
5 Image Interpretation as Object Constitution: Hermeneutic Strategies in Neuroscientific Practice
151(16)
Bas de Boer
6 "To Be Or Not To Be": Hermeneutic Relations Through Technology in Clinical Cytology
167(24)
Anette Forss
7 Not Too Queer To Be Straight And Not Too Straight To Be Queer: Becoming Bisexual Through The Screen Of Digital Hook-Up App Bumble
191(22)
Katie Warfield
SECTION 4 Postphenomenology as Practice/Theory
8 Feynman Diagrams and the Phenomenology of Paper Tools
213(12)
Robert P. Crease
9 Collective Visual Hermeneutics: How Posthumanist Learning Forms Perception with Technologies
225(22)
Cathrine Hasse
10 Philosophize In It! Politicize With it!: Postphenomenology and Earth Remote Sensing as Sites of Political/Scientific Intervention
247(26)
Samantha J. Fried
SECTION 5 Critical Respondents
11 Attending to the Otherwise: Reading Illusions through Virtual Reality
273(4)
Lisa Messeri
12 Reflections on Postphenomenological Crossings
277(6)
Janet Vertesi
13 Representationalism: A Haunting
283(10)
Will Sutherland
David Ribes
Index 293(6)
About the Contributors 299
Samantha J. Fried is director of the Civic Studies Program at the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life at Tufts University.

Robert Rosenberger is associate professor of philosophy at the Georgia Institute of Technology in the School of Public Policy.