•  411
    What stirs us when a wooden object is made, used, disposed—and felt—in our own hands? The concept of techno-(onto-) poiesis, which foregrounds the prevailing, manifest importance of technical ingenuity and the processual effect upon the end-product itself, has emerged from recent discussion on the genealogies of various techniques from around the premodern world. Relying on the textual and archaeological materials whose intersection tends to be overlooked by precedent studies of ancient history,…Read more
  •  11
    Our recent paper examines the relevancy of the latest dual conception of technopoiesis and technopraxis, the former denoting a situation of the prevailing, manifest importance of a technical process upon its end-product and the latter the overall approach of technology conditioned by a dominantly teleological perspective, proposing the idea of techno-onto-poiesis (counterbalanced by techno-ontic-praxis) that points to the efflorescence of techniques (and their material and metaphysical potential…Read more
  •  160
    A piece of wax—typically of a spherical shape—has been evoked occasionally as an apt example of how our engagement with the commonest everyday object may constitute a “raw” yet unexpectedly rich (and taxing) experience, from the Aristotelian discourse of Περὶ Ψυχῆς (_On the Soul_) to the ancient Chinese historical treatises, where the technique of making _lajuan _(wax-embraced silk) became a practical metaphor for the low-key transmission of classified information. Using the semi-enclosed, “wall…Read more
  •  130
    Refining Technopoiesis: Measures and Measuring Thinking in Ancient China
    Philosophy and Technology 36 (2): 1-41. 2023.
    Most recently, two distinctions—echoing the cross-disciplinary critique of the teleological and “quantitative” approach of human arts and sciences at the expanse of the “qualitative”—have been foregrounded by Amzallag (Philosophy and Technology 34, 785–809, 2021) and Crease (2011), respectively, between the modern understanding of “technology” (as technopraxis) and the “forgotten dimension/phase of technology” (called technopoiesis) and between the ontic and ontological measurement. Pace gently …Read more