
I am honoured to be considered as one of Belgium’s “Top 50 tech-pioneers” in the category “Leiders en Denkers” by De Tijd.


I am honoured to be considered as one of Belgium’s “Top 50 tech-pioneers” in the category “Leiders en Denkers” by De Tijd.


In the context of preparations of my inaugural lecture, I have been interviewed for the University of Vienna’s uni:view magazine. The full article can be read here.
I very much look forward to my inaugural lecture on May 10. It takes place at 5 pm on the Faculty’s dies facultatis in the main building’s Großer Festsaal.
(picture taken by Nana Thurner)

My new book New Romantic Cyborgs: Romanticism, Information Technology, and the End of the Machine is available now:
https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/new-romantic-cyborgs

I was interviewed by Etienne Verbist from Artdependence Magazine, an international online magazine covering the spheres of classic, modern, and contemporary art.
Full interview including countless references to contemporary artists and curators who work on/ with technology to be read here.
Picture provided by Samuel Zeller via Unsplash (licensed under CCO 1.0)

Picture Source: *
DATE 13 March 2017
VENUE TBA, Vienna, Austria
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
Langdon Winner
Department of Science and Technology Studies, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY, USA
Alfred Nordmann
Institute of Philosophy, TU Darmstadt, Germany
Call for Papers: Download
INTRODUCTION TO THE THEME
Few philosophers of technology enlist Wittgenstein’s work when thinking about technology, and scholars of Wittgenstein pay scant attention to remarks about technology in his work. This double neglect of (aspects of) Wittgenstein’s work is symptomatic of a more general gap between philosophy of language and philosophy of technology. This workshop aims to close these gaps with presentations and discussions that use Wittgenstein to conceptually develop existing investigations in philosophy of technology and/or to better understand and evaluate technologies in the 21st century.
Questions to be discussed will include, but are in no way limited to, the following:
1) Is Ludwig Wittgenstein a “forgotten” classical author in the philosophy of technology? Can we read Wittgenstein’s works in a way that renders these works helpful to the philosophy of technology?
2) Conversely, could current positions and concepts in the philosophy of technology furnish a criticism of Wittgenstein’s thought, a criticism perhaps underdeveloped in or absent from the established reception (positive or critical) of Wittgenstein’s works?
3) Can Wittgenstein’s late reflections on use and forms of life add to, possibly even recitfy, current understandings of these notions in the philosophy of technology?
4) What light, if any, does Wittgenstein’s personal engagement with the engineering profession (from his studies in Manchester to his Vienna forays into building technology) shed on his subsequent engagements with philosophy?
5) What can we learn from Wittgenstein to better understand how we talk to machines and how machines talk to us (e.g. social robots)?
6) How can we use Wittgenstein to better understand the cultural, social, and political dimensions of contemporary technosciences such as synthetic biology (e.g. usage of the word “life”)?
7) Does Wittgenstein help us to understand connections between language and technology in the internet of things?
8) Can a Wittgensteinian approach contribute to addressing the problem of how to communicate specialized disciplinary terminology in transdisciplinary research?
CALL FOR PAPERS
A limited number of slots is available for non-invited papers.
Please send a 500 words abstract by 1 February 2017 to agnes.buchberger [at] univie.ac.at if you want to be considered for inclusion in the workshop.
REGISTRATION
Registration to attend is free but obligatory.
For registration and organizational issues contact Agnes Buchberger (agnes.buchberger [at] univie.ac.at)
ORGANISATION
Prof. Mark Coeckelbergh
mark.coeckelbergh@univie.ac.at
http://www.coeckelbergh.wordpress.com/
Michael Funk
funkmichael@posteo.de
www.funkmichael.com
Dr. Stefan Koller
skoller@uccs.edu
This workshop is funded by the Chair of Philosophy of Media and Technology (Univ.-Prof. Dr. Mark Coeckelbergh), the Department of Philosophy, and the Faculty of Philosophy and Education, University of Vienna.
* Picture source: Christiaan Tonnis via Flickr Creative Commons (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Proud to be member of the Technical Expertise Committee at the Foundation for Responsible Robotics, along with Kevin Kelly and Charles Ess.

Ongoing developments in robotics and plant sciences put pressure on traditional dichotomies like biology/technology, natural/artificial, living/non-living, autonomic/automatic. The blurring of these categories generates new ontological and ethical questions.
Are plants and robots two categorically different phenomena? How are we to think of new possibilities like robotic ecosystems, robot plants, and the networking of non-human intelligences? And how are we to choose, act, and live virtuously when confronting such novelties?
In this workshop, we explore relational accounts as promising ways to cross established borders, re-elaborate distinctions and possibly build new philosophical bridges. We do so by discussing new ways of looking at, thinking about, and engaging and dealing with plants and robots from different perspectives in philosophy, robotics, and art.
Click here for the workshop poster.