Grunwald, Armin,

The hermeneutic side of responsible research and innovation / Armin Grunwald. - 1 online resource - Responsible research and innovation set ; volume 5 . - Responsible research and innovation set ; v. 5. .

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Cover ; Title Page ; Copyright; Contents; Foreword; Preface; 1. What Makes New Science and Technology Meaningful to Society?; 1.1. Motivation and objectives; 1.2. The need for orientation in NEST fields; 1.3. Short propaedeutic; 1.3.1. The meaning of "sociotechnical meaning"; 1.3.2. NEST: new and emerging science and technologies; 1.3.3. Techno-visionary futures; 1.4. A brief guide to this book; 1.4.1. The flow of argumentation; 1.4.2. The chapters; 1.4.3. The achievements; 2. Extending the Object of Responsibility Assessments in RRI; 2.1. Motivation and overview. 2.2. Some impressions of RRI debates so far2.3. A pragmatic view on the notion of responsibility; 2.3.1. The concept of responsibility; 2.3.2. The EEE approach to responsibility; 2.3.3. Responsibility assessment; 2.4. The object of responsibility debates in RRI so far; 2.5. The object of responsibility debates in RRI: an extension; 2.6. Concluding remarks; 3. Assessing Responsibility by Considering Techno-Futures; 3.1. Responsibility assessments: introduction and overview; 3.2. Brief remarks on the epistemology of prospective knowledge. 3.2.1. The epistemologically precarious character of prospective knowledge3.2.2. Futures as social constructs; 3.3. Responsibility for NEST: the orientation dilemma; 3.3.1. Challenges to providing orientation in NEST fields; 3.3.2. The orientation dilemma; 3.4. Three modes of orientation; 3.4.1. Prediction and prognostication: mode 1 orientation; 3.4.2. Scenarios and the value of diversity: mode 2 orientation; 3.4.3. The value of divergence: mode 3 orientation; 3.5. The hermeneutic approach to techno-visionary futures; 4. Definitions and Characterizations of NEST as Construction of Meaning. 4.1. Motivation and point of departure4.2. Some observations from NEST debates; 4.2.1. Nanotechnology; 4.2.2. Synthetic biology; 4.2.3. Enhancement; 4.3. The pragmatic character of definitions1; 4.4. Defining and characterizing as meaning-giving activity; 5. Understanding Nanotechnology: A Process Involving Contested Assignments of Meaning; 5.1. Nanotechnology: a paradigmatic RRI story; 5.2. The early time of nanotechnology: troubled beginnings; 5.2.1. Apocalyptic techno-visionary futures related to nano; 5.2.2. Threats to human health and the environment. 5.2.3. Philosophical characterizations5.3. Defining nanotechnology: a mission impossible?; 5.4. The meaning of nanotechnology: the shift from a revolutionary to a quite normal technology; 5.4.1. Looking back: the development of nanotechnology's meaning; 5.4.2. Hermeneutic work on nanotechnology; 5.4.3. Lessons learned for RRI debates; 6. Robots: Challenge to the Self-Understanding of Humans; 6.1. Autonomous technology: challenges to our comprehension; 6.2. Robots that can make plans and Man's self-image; 6.2.1. Planning robots; 6.2.2. Planning as special type of acting.

The book investigates the meaning of RRI if little or no valid knowledge about consequences of innovation and technology is available. It proposes a hermeneutical turn to investigate narratives about possible futures with respect to their contemporary meaning instead of regarding them as anticipations of the future.

111934087X 9781119340874 9781119340898 1119340896 9781119340911 1119340918

972907 MIL

2016954166


Research--Moral and ethical aspects.
Technological innovations--Moral and ethical aspects.
Recherche--Aspect moral.
Innovations--Aspect moral.
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS--Business Ethics.
Research--Moral and ethical aspects
Technological innovations--Moral and ethical aspects

Q180.55.M67

174/.90014