Technological Fantasies of Nao: remarks about alterity relations

Stina Hasse Jørgensen, Oliver Alexander Tafdrup

Abstract

This article will through a ‘what-if’ scenario involving the humanoid robot, Nao, as a museum guide, discuss the potential benefits of theorizing social robots through a perspective grounded in critical design and postphenomenology. Within Science and Technology-studies (STS) postphenomenology has been the ‘go-to’ theory when discussing the philosophical aspects of human-technology relations. Postphenomenology directly addresses how humans on a phenomenological level relate to robots through an ‘alterity-relation’ that establishes the robot as a ‘quasi-other’. A methodological discussion of how to conduct
empirical postphenomenological research into robotics, has, however, not been thoroughly unfolded, although the question of a general postphenomenological methodology has been touched upon. This article provides a contribution to the debate on how to enquire into human-robot relations.

In this article we will argue that critical design provides a methodological framework compliant with postphenomenological mode of analysis. Furthermore we will argue that our empirical data is capable of eliciting aspects of how ideological shaped technological fantasies function to sustain the experience of Nao as a ‘quasi-other’, even though Nao fails to function properly.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummer6
TidsskriftTransformations
Udgave nummer29
Sider (fra-til)88-103
Antal sider16
ISSN1444-3775
StatusUdgivet - 2 feb. 2017

Emneord

  • Det Humanistiske Fakultet

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