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Heidegger, Habermas and the mobile phone

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Move over e-commerce, mantra of the late 20th century... welcome in-commerce, catchword of the new millennium! Everyone remembers 'It's good to talk, the cosy slogan of the telephone at the end of the last century. But now we are witnessing a global campaign to promote the mobile: as credit card, Internet link, e-mail port, and, if you still have time, voice-mail junction. By 2003, we are told, there will be 900 million Internet-connected mobiles. This Postmodern Encounter gives the gist of the massive campaign to mobilise the globe, and asks the urgent question: what is happening to the idea of communication? Key thinkers of the 20th century offer an essential alternative to these new doctrines of m-communication: Martin Heidegger, who saw humanity as "the entity which talks", and Jurgen Habermas, current-day advocates of authentic communication. This is a close encounter between alien visions of communication - between the conflicting utopianisms of 20th-century philosophers and 21st-century "mobilised communication."

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Heidegger, Habermas and the mobile phone, George Myerson

Lingua
Pubblicato
2001
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(In brossura)
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Titolo
Heidegger, Habermas and the mobile phone
Lingua
Inglese
Pubblicato
2001
Formato
In brossura
Pagine
80
ISBN10
1840462361
ISBN13
9781840462364
Prima pubblicazione
2003
Titolo originale
Heidegger, Habermas and the mobile phone
Valutazione
3,4 su 5
Descrizione
Move over e-commerce, mantra of the late 20th century... welcome in-commerce, catchword of the new millennium! Everyone remembers 'It's good to talk, the cosy slogan of the telephone at the end of the last century. But now we are witnessing a global campaign to promote the mobile: as credit card, Internet link, e-mail port, and, if you still have time, voice-mail junction. By 2003, we are told, there will be 900 million Internet-connected mobiles. This Postmodern Encounter gives the gist of the massive campaign to mobilise the globe, and asks the urgent question: what is happening to the idea of communication? Key thinkers of the 20th century offer an essential alternative to these new doctrines of m-communication: Martin Heidegger, who saw humanity as "the entity which talks", and Jurgen Habermas, current-day advocates of authentic communication. This is a close encounter between alien visions of communication - between the conflicting utopianisms of 20th-century philosophers and 21st-century "mobilised communication."