The inclusion of is not a mistake. It signals a specific user intent: scholars and students want to read this dense philosophical work on Amazon Kindle devices or the Kindle app. The Mobi format (Mobipocket) has been largely superseded by AZW3 and KFX, but it remains the most widely recognized container for DRM-free philosophical texts.
Whether you are reading on a Kindle app or a dedicated e-reader, the MOBI format allows for easy navigation between the volume’s pivotal chapters. Here are the core pillars that hold the "matrix" together:
In the realm of philosophy of technology, the concept of technoscience has gained significant attention in recent years. Technoscience refers to the intricate and dynamic relationship between technology and science, highlighting the ways in which they intersect and influence one another. One of the key proponents of this concept is the Indiana Series in the Philosophy of Technology, which has been at the forefront of exploring the complex matrix of materiality that underlies technoscience. The inclusion of is not a mistake
Chasing the Matrix: Materiality, Technoscience, and the Indiana Series
Known for post-phenomenology and how technology "mediates" our perception. Whether you are reading on a Kindle app
Explores the ethical and social responsibilities inherent in shaping the future of technology. Virginia Tech Key Contributors and Perspectives
If you’ve ever tried to pin down what “materiality” means in the philosophy of technology, you know the feeling: just as you think you’ve grasped it, the object shifts. Screens become gestures. Algorithms become concrete. The body becomes a node. This is the chase. One of the key proponents of this concept
The editors and contributors argue that we cannot understand "the digital" without acknowledging the physical "stuff" that makes it possible—the silicon, the cables, and the human bodies interacting with interfaces. Key Pillars of the Indiana Series