How digital technology is profoundly renewing our sense of what is
real and how we perceive.
Digital technologies are not just tools; they are structures of
perception. They determine the way in which the world appears to us. For
nearly half a century, technology has provided us with perceptions
coming from an unknown world. The digital beings that emerge from our
screens and our interfaces disrupt the notion of what we experience as
real, thereby leading us to relearn how to perceive. In Being and the
Screen, Stéphane Vial provides a philosophical analysis of technology
in general, and of digital technologies in particular, that relies on
the observation of experience (phenomenology) and the history of
technology (epistemology). He explains that technology is no longer
separate from ourselves--if it ever was. Rather, we are as much a part
of the machine as the machine is part of us. Vial argues that the
so-called difference between the real and the virtual does not exist and
never has. We are living in a hybrid environment--which is both digital
and nondigital, online and offline. With this book, Vial endows
philosophical meaning to what we experience daily in our digital age.
In A Short Treatise on Design, Vial offers a concise introduction to
the discipline of design--not a history book, but a book built of
philosophical problems, developing a theory of the effect of design.
This book is published with the support of the University of Nîmes,
France.