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Fiction in the Integrated Circuit
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Author (aut): Stein, Eric A.
Thesis advisor (ths): Zimmermann, Jens
Degree committee member (dgc): Nelson, Holly
Degree committee member (dgc): Bonnett, John
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Degree granting institution (dgg): Trinity Western University. SGS
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Abstract
This study takes up the question of the cyborg through a close reading of key historical texts in the technical and scientific literature informing modern integrated circuit technology, and of twentieth- and twenty-first century texts in continental theory and philosophy, in order to present a viable notion of subjectivity for our technological age. To this end, this study articulates a morphology of the cyborg as a philosophical, political, and technological subject uniquely situated and acting in the world, a subject that upends conceptions of truth and knowledge as representation or correspondence. The cyborg instead presents a playful sensibility in touch with the openness of existence itself to becoming, newness, and life. Through her skillful traversal of the world-machine the cyborg resists established networks of power, creating havens of intimacy in the dark away from the searing light of transcendental reason. |
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100-Extracted Text.txt320.9 KB
twu_456.pdf1012.81 KB
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English
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Fiction in the Integrated Circuit
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1037122
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