Table of Contents
Introduction: Heidegger’s Thinking Through Technology
Christopher Merwin, Aaron James Wendland, and Christos Hadjioannou
1. The Task of Thinking in a Technological Age
Mark A. Wrathall
2. Im-position: Heidegger’s Analysis of the Essence of Modern Technology
Daniel O. Dahlstrom
3. Heidegger’s Critique of Techno-science as a Critique of Husserl’s Reductive Method
Christos Hadjioannou
4. The Challenge of Heidegger’s Approach to Technology: A Phenomenological Reading
Steven Crowell
5. Letting Things Be for Themselves: Gelassenheit as Enabling Thinking
Tobias Keiling
6. The Question Concerning the Machine: Heidegger’s Technology Notebooks in the 1940s-50s
Andrew J. Mitchell
7. Heidegger’s Releasement from the Technological Will
Bret W. Davis
8. Heidegger’s New Beginning: History, Technology, and National Socialism
Aaron James Wendland
9. Technology, Ontotheology, Education
Iain Thomson
10. Heidegger, Habermas, Freedom, and Technology
Julian Young
11. How Pertinent is Heidegger’s Thinking for Deep Ecology?
Michael E. Zimmerman
12. Poetry and the Gods: From Gestell to Gelassenheit
Susanne Claxton
13. Letting Beings Be: An Ecofeminist Reading of Gestell, Gelassenheit, and Sustainability
Patricia Glazebrook
14. Machenshaft and the Audit Society: The Philosophy and Politics of the ‘Accessibility of Everything to Everyone’
Denis McManus
15. Heidegger vs. Kuhn: Does Science Think?
Aaron James Wendland
16. Quantum Theory as Technology
Taylor Carman
17. Naturalizing Gestell?
Rafael Winkler