Prolegomena to a Future Robot History: Stiegler, Epiphylogenesis and Technical Evolution
Abstract
How does one tell the story of a machine? Can we say that technical artefacts have their own genealogies, their own evolutionary dynamic? Bernard Stiegler feels this question is an urgent one, and calls for more research into technical evolution in his book, Technics and Time. In the following essay, we will be answering Stiegler’s call. Firstly, we will be reviewing the work of several key theorists from different disciplines who have attempted to understand technical evolution, many of whom Stiegler uses in his own work; in order of appearance, paleontologist Niles Eldredge, the philosophers Jacques Derrida and Manuel DeLanda, and archeologist André Leroi-Gourhan. We will then lift some ideas and problems from each of them in an effort to construct a prolegomena to the history of a technical machine, a history which is not included here and which has yet to be written. We want to build a theory of technical evolution.
Author Biography
Andrés Vaccari
Andrés Vaccari is a tutor at the online program of the Department of Philosophy, Macquarie University, and at the Faculty of Design and Creative Practice, University of Canberra (also online). He is also a Researcher at the Centre of Studies on Science, Development and Higher Education (Buenos Aires, Argentina). More information at www.andresvaccari.net and mq.academia.edu/AndresVaccari.
Belinda Barnet
Belinda Barnet is currently Lecturer in Media at Swinburne University Melbourne, in association with Smart Services CRC. She has a PhD in Media and Communications from UNSW.