Product Information
Digital materiality (digimat) proposes a set of basic principles for how we understand the world through digital processes. Digital instruments may seem forbiddingly complex but they are based on simple mechanical principles which operate today on the subatomic scale, creating challenges for conventional human epistemology. This short book sets out a methodical materialist understanding of digital technologies, where they come from, how they work, and what they do. This analysis starts from the classical materialism of the Greek physicist-philosophers, engages with the humanist and historical materialism of the flourishing of Enlightenment arts and sciences, and extrapolates from post-humanist new materialism informed by quantum physics. There can be no future without a present and that present is always, persistently material. Readers of this book must grapple with the mattering of digital material, especially the awe-inspiring epistemological schism between the infinitesimal, lightspeed reality of digital data and conventional, empirical human epistemologies which provide the vocabularies and cultural metaphors we must have recourse to in the attempt to discuss, communicate and decypher these phenomena. The obsolescent figure of anthropos (human being) will provide a central foil and subject for this challenge to understand our digital tools and their seemingly irrepressible reproduction. The future of humanity is at stake!Product Identifiers
PublisherEmerald Publishing The Limited
ISBN-139781787436695
eBay Product ID (ePID)12046681462
Product Key Features
Book TitleDigital Materialism: Origins, Philosophies, Prospects
AuthorAthina Karatzogianni, Dr Baruch Gottlieb
FormatPaperback
LanguageEnglish
Publication Year2018
Number of Pages216 Pages
Dimensions
Item Height198mm
Item Width129mm
Additional Product Features
Title_AuthorAthina Karatzogianni, Dr Baruch Gottlieb
Series TitleDigital Activism and Society: Politics, Economy and Culture in Network Communication
Country/Region of ManufactureUnited Kingdom