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Image Three Inquiries In Technology And Imagination Mark C Taylor Maryjane Rubenstein Thomas A Carlson

  • SKU: BELL-51763064
Image Three Inquiries In Technology And Imagination Mark C Taylor Maryjane Rubenstein Thomas A Carlson
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Image Three Inquiries In Technology And Imagination Mark C Taylor Maryjane Rubenstein Thomas A Carlson instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Chicago Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 8.32 MB
Pages: 240
Author: Mark C. Taylor; Mary-Jane Rubenstein; Thomas A. Carlson
ISBN: 9780226782317, 022678231X
Language: English
Year: 2021

Product desciption

Image Three Inquiries In Technology And Imagination Mark C Taylor Maryjane Rubenstein Thomas A Carlson by Mark C. Taylor; Mary-jane Rubenstein; Thomas A. Carlson 9780226782317, 022678231X instant download after payment.

Modern life is steeped in images, image-making, and attempts to control the world through vision. Mastery of images has been advanced by technologies that expand and reshape vision and enable us to create, store, transmit, and display images. The three essays in Image, written by leading philosophers of religion Mark C. Taylor, Mary-Jane Rubenstein, and Thomas A. Carlson, explore the power of the visual at the intersection of the human and the technological. Building on Heidegger’s notion that modern humanity aims to master the world by picturing or representing the real, they investigate the contemporary culture of the image in its philosophical, religious, economic, political, imperial, and military dimensions, challenging the abstraction, anonymity, and dangerous disconnection of contemporary images.
Taylor traces a history of capitalism, focusing on its lack of humility, particularly in the face of mortality, and he considers art as a possible way to reconnect us to the earth. Through a genealogy of iconic views from space, Rubenstein exposes the delusions of conquest associated with extraterrestrial travel. Starting with the pressing issues of surveillance capitalism and facial recognition technology, Carlson extends Heidegger’s analysis through a meditation on the telematic elimination of the individual brought about by totalizing technologies. Together, these essays call for a consideration of how we can act responsibly toward the past in a way that preserves the earth for future generations. Attending to the fragility of material things and to our own mortality, they propose new practices of imagination grounded in love and humility.

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