Difference between revisions 161692961 and 161692962 on dewiki{{BLP sources|date=January 2015}} {{Infobox philosopher | region = Western Philosophy | era = [[Contemporary philosophy]] | image = Don Ihde.jpg | caption = | name = Don Ihde | birth_date = 1934 | birth_place = [[Hope, Kansas]] | death_date = | death_place = | school_tradition = [[Hermeneutics|Hermeneutic]] [[Phenomenology (philosophy)| phenomenology]]<br>(Postphenomenology)<ref name="Waelbers"/> | main_interests = | influences = [[Hubert Dreyfus]], [[Paul Ricœur]], [[Martin Heidegger]], [[Hans-Georg Gadamer]], [[Maurice Merleau-Ponty]], [[Gaston Bachelard]] | influenced = [[Lucas Introna]] | notable_ideas = Experimental phenomenology }} '''Don Ihde''' ({{IPAc-en|d|ɑː|n|_|aɪ|d|}}; born 1934) is an [[United States|American]] [[philosopher of science]] and [[Philosophy of technology|technology]], and a post-[[P[[Postphenomenology (philosophy)||postphenomenologist]].<ref name="Waelbers">Katinka Waelbers, ''Doing Good with Technologies:: Taking Responsibility for the Social Role of Emerging Technologies'', Springer, 2011, p. 77.</ref> In 1979 he wrote what is often identified as the first North American work on philosophy of technology,<ref>Paul T. Durbin "Philosophy of technology: in search of discourse synthesis", ''Technè: Research in Philosophy and Technology'' 10:2, Winter 2006, pp. 95–96: "Don Ihde's ''Technics and Praxis'' is the first full-scale philosophical analysis of technology by an American to appear in English"</ref> ''Technics and Prax(contracted; show full){{DEFAULTSORT:Ihde, Don}} [[Category:1934 births]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:Philosophers of science]] [[Category:Philosophers of technology]] [[Category:State University of New York at Stony Brook faculty]] [[Category:Hermeneutists]] [[Category:Heidegger scholars]] All content in the above text box is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license Version 4 and was originally sourced from https://de.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=prev&oldid=161692962.
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