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Medical Technics: Notes

Medical Technics
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Contents
  5. Introduction
  6. Sonifying Science: Listening to Cancer
  7. Aging: I Don’t Want to Be a Cyborg, I and II
  8. Aging Cyborg, III, IV, V, VI, and VII
  9. From Embodiment Skills in Computer Games to Nintendo Surgery
  10. Postphenomenological Postscript: From Macro- to Microtechnics
  11. We Make Technology, Technology Makes Us
  12. Additional Resources
  13. Acknowledgments
  14. About the Author

Notes

Sonifying Science: Listening to Cancer

1. Jill Cook, Ice Age Art: Arrival of the Modern Mind (London: The British Museum Press, 2013). This catalogue of Ice Age Art was the largest Europe-wide collection of art artifacts to date.

2. Don Ihde, “Art Precedes Science, or Did the Camera Obscura Invent Modern Science?” in Instruments in Art and Science, ed. Helmar Schramann, Ludger Schwarte, and Jan Lazardzig (Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2018), 383–93.

3. Daniel Joliffe and Jocelyn Robert, Ground Station, 2003, Surrey Art Gallery.

4. “Now Hear This,” The Economist, March 19, 2016, 83.

5. Ron Cowen, “Sound Bytes,” The Scientific American, March 2015, 45.

6. Cowen, 45.

7. Cowen, 45.

8. Cowen, 46.

9. Cowen, 46.

10. Cowen, 47.

11. Cowen, 47.

12. See my Expanding Hermeneutics: Visualizing Science (Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press, 1998).

Aging: I Don’t Want to Be a Cyborg, I and II

1. Don Ihde, Technology and the Lifeworld: From Garden to Earth (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1990), 75.

2. Vivian Sobchack, Carnal Thoughts: Embodiment and Moving Image Culture (Oakland: University of California Press, 2004), 172.

3. Sobchack, 172.

Postphenomenological Postscript: From Macro- to Microtechnics

1. Dwight Eisenhower, NPR last interview, April 1961.

2. The Human Genome Project was completed April 2003 at a cost of $3 billion.

We Make Technology, Technology Makes Us

1. Originally published on GuernicaMag.com 12/1/2017.

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