Reviewer Notes For Finals
Reviewer Notes For Finals
Reviewer Notes For Finals
Martin Heidegger
German Philosopher
Most famous work: Being and Time
o Existential Analysis of DASEIN
Dasein – A German word that means “being there” or “being thrown into”
According to Heidegger, we are thrown into a world that is already taken care of. We interact with
other Dasein and make sense of all the other beings in the world. We are therefore a being in the world
participating into something and interacting with other Dasein.
According to Heidegger’s Dasein, every act that we make is a way of comforting ourselves and for
Life to be meaningful it must have a social significance.
What is Science?
It is a way in which we make sense out of reality
Leaping In
Treating others as objects
Leaping Ahead
Care and Help others
Cartesian Self
An individual’s mind, separate from the body and the outside world, thinking about itself and its
existence.
Metaphysics
According to Aristotle it is the study of being as being
It deals with human reality and system of human thought that seeks to explain the fundamental
concept of man.
WHAT IS THE ESSENCE OF TECHNOLOGY ACCORDING TO MARTIN HEIDEGGER?
But Heidegger redefined the essence of technology after 1954 – 9 years after WWII when the use of
technology have destroyed almost half of Europe and all of Nagasaki and Hiroshima.
He thought that technology is not just a result of human progression thru innovation.
He knew that this mentality can take mankind into a darker path.
The Essence of Technology is by no means anything technical. It is not simply the pushing
forward of innovation, of newer and faster and more efficient machines and systems.
“Everything depends on our manipulating technology in the proper manner as means. We will,
as we say, get technology spiritually in hand
Causa Materialis
o Material Cause
o What is the object made of?
o Material from which something is made
o Social Media: Hardware and the servers, user generated content and the profiles, the
links to articles and news. Both Raw material and Raw Data.
Causa Formalis
o Formal Cause
o How does the object look like?
o Shape of the material
o Social Media: Code of the social networking services, the Algorithms the types of
connections and how they’re organized and presented
Causa Efficience
o Efficient Cause
o Who created the object?
o Causer/manufacturer
o Social Media: Owner or creator of platform.
Causa Finalis
o Final Cause
o What is the purpose of the object?
o End use of the material
o Reason why it is made
o Social Media: The different reasons users want to connect with each other but
ultimately it’s about human connection, the desire to connect.
Concern of Heidegger:
Western Philosophy is obsessed with causes and with measuring things, with Aristotle, with
quantifying and surveying forms and materials.
Those 4 causes reveal something more mysterious about being itself. For him each cause
belongs together and connected and responsible for each other. For him all four are uniting.
The causas bring something into appearance. They let it come forth into presencing” –bringing
something from concealment to unconcealemnt. It’s name is veritas, truth.
Every bringing forth is grounded in revealing. We reveal something new and mysterious, what
we can provide and what it can do for us.
o Craftsman brings forth the chalice
o Engineer brings forth the jet engine
Bringing forth something that is previously hidden.
“We can’t solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.”
- Albert Einstein
Is technology the answer to sustainability? Or does the answer lie in “evolution of human
consciousness” from a selfish to universal altruistic states?
What has been the most important scientific discovery in your lifetime?
Is technology a real evolution of the history of man, or does technology enslaves us?
o I think it depends on how we allow technology to affect us. If we use technology for the
purpose of helping us to do our jobs better and have efficient results, then I believe
technology can be considered as a real evolution in terms of the history of humans. But
then again, seeing the many negative effects of this very same “technology” to the lives
of many humans, especially to the members of the younger generation of this present
age, I guess I would have to think again if my first statement is true for all. You see, we
humans have abused our world and we created a lot of things that we thought would
help us solve the very problems of human society to the point that we no longer think
like rational beings but like machines, and I believe this is the problem: we failed to
focus on why we developed technology in the first place. We became clouded by the
amount of money we can get from it so we try to develop more and more machines and
gadgets that are really not a need anymore but just to satisfy our wants, thus, creating a
world which might actually loose its very essence soon if we don’t do something about
them now.
Human Flourishing
It is said to be the best translation for the Greek word Eudaimonia, which for Plato and Aristotle,
means not only good fortune and material prosperity but a situation achieved through virtue,
knowledge, and excellence.
Learning to be human is central to Confucian humanism and its ‘creative transformation’ of the
self through an ever-expanding network of relationships encompassing the family, community,
nation, world, and beyond.
According to Aristotle, all humans seek to flourish. It is the proper and desired end of all of our
actions. Flourishing, however, is a functional definition. To understand something’s function,
you have to understand its nature.
Four Aspects of Human Nature according to Aristotle:
o Physical
We require nourishment, exercise, rest, and all the other things that it takes to
keep our bodies functioning properly.
o Emotional
We have wants, desires, urges, and reactions
We perceive something in the world that we want, and we have the power of
volition to get it; likewise, we have the power to avoid the things we do not
want.
o Social
We must live and function in particular societies
Our social nature stacks on top of our emotional nature, such that we have
wants and needs that we would not have were we not social creatures.
o Rational
We are creative
We are expressive
We are knowledge-seeking
We are able to obey reason
Human Flourishing becomes an actuality when one uses his practical reason to consider his
unique needs, circumstances, and capabilities, and so on, to determine which concrete
instantiations of human values and virtues will comprise his well-being.
Human flourishing is positively related to a rational man’s attempts to externalize his values and
actualize his internal views of how things ought to be in the outside world.
GOOD LIFE
Everyone has a different definition of the word “good,” especially in the context of life,
depending on many factors, such as where and how people live.
Philosophers and thinkers, like Plato, Aristotle, Immanuel Kant, and Friedrich Nietzsche, once
made the question of the good life central to their philosophy.
THE TEN (10) GLODEN RULES by Michael Soupios and Panos Mourdoukoutas
1. Examine life
2. Worry only about the things that are in your control
3. Treasure friendship
4. Experience true pleasure
5. Master yourself
6. Avoid excess
7. Be responsible human being
8. Don’t be a Prosperous Fool
9. Don’t do evil to others
10. Kindness toward others tends to be rewarded
The Chief Good – The inquiry which serves to guide the entire enterprise of the Nichomachean
Ethics is answering the question as to what is the chief human good. The chief good, still
familiar to us today through use of the Latin term, summum bonum, is that thing at which all
people aim, and for which all other things are done. Aristotle says that happiness is the chief
good, and famously says that happiness is an “activity of reason in accordance with virtue… and
this is in a full life” (1098a16-18).2) This last point is meant to emphasize that in order to
achieve the chief good one must live a complete life of excellence, all the way unto death.
The search for life’s meaning has produced much philosophical, scientific, theological, and
metaphysical speculation throughout history.
Notions:
Nonrivalrous
o Denotes any product or service that does not reduce in availability as people consume
it.
Nonexcludable
o Refers to any product or service that is impossible to provide without it being available
for many people to enjoy.
In some cases, a public good can be excludable, and a private good can be
Nonexcludable
Quasi-Public Good
o Goods and services that have characteristics of being Nonrivalrous and Nonexcludable
but are not pure public goods.
Ergo: “A Public Good must be available for everyone and not be limited in quantity”.
Rolando Gripaldo
Information Age
Also known as the computer age, digital age or new media age
A period in human history in which the modern age is regarded as a time in which information
has become a commodity that is quickly and widely disseminated and easily available especially
through the use of computer technology.
The economic stability of the world’s market also depends on the well-rounded technology
today.
Digital industry creates a knowledge-based society surrounded by a high-tech global economy
that spans its influence on how the manufacturing and the service sectors operate in an efficient
and convenient way.
In 2005, Von Baeyer stated that information is poised to replace matter as the primary stuff of
the universe. He said that it will provide a new basic framework for describing and predicting
reality in the 21st century.
We live in a world where being informed means literacy, and information allows learners to
connect with the technological environment and the modern world of technology.
The Information Age started when the Gutenberg era was first established by Johannes
Gutenberg, who was responsible for shaping the nature of society and its institutions
throughout the period. This was called “THE GUTENBERG PRINCIPLE”
Johannes Gutenberg
Gutenberg Principle
Human Health is greatly dependent on biodiversity, which sustains our food supply, the
nutrients and medicines that sustain life.
We cannot have healthy societies without biodiversity, and yet the threats to biodiversity are
making the achievement of universal good health an even greater challenge.
What is Biodiversity?
Importance of Biodiversity
It includes organisms from earth’s vastly different ecosystems, including deserts, rainforests,
coral reefs, grasslands, tundra, and polar ice caps.
Characteristics of a healthy and rich biodiversity:
o Each species in an ecosystem has a specific niche—a role to play.
o Support a larger number of plant species and, therefore, a greater variety of crops.
o Protect freshwater resources.
o Promote soil formation and protection
o Provide for nutrient storage and recycling
o Aid in breaking down pollutants
o Contribute to climate stability
o Provide more food resources
o Offer environment for recreation and tourism
o Provide more medicinal resources and pharmaceutical drugs
o Social benefits like tourism and recreation, cultural value, and educational research
We need to sustain the natural area made up of the community of plants, animals, and all other
living things, which is beginning to be reduced at a steady rate as we plan human activities that
are being reduced by habitat destruction.
Many industries stand to benefit from additional GMO research. For instance, a number of
microorganisms are being considered as future clean fuel producers and biodegraders.
Genetically modified plants may someday be used to produce recombinant vaccines.
There are unknown consequences to altering the natural state of an organism through foreign
gene expression.
o Such alterations can change the organism’s metabolism, growth rate, and/or response
to external environmental factors.
o Horizontal gene transfer of pesticide, herbicide, or antibiotic resistance to some other
organisms would not only put humans at risk, but it would also cause ecological
imbalances, allowing previously innocuous plants to grow uncontrolled, thus, promoting
the spread of disease among both plants and animals.
THE RISKS OF GENETIC ENGINEERING:
o Environmental Hazards
o Human Health Risks
o Economic Concerns
The Nano World
Past decades had witnessed man’s attempts to address and combat various problems affecting
him like diseases, insufficient resources, and pollution among others, to increase his survival, as well as
to improve the quality of his living in this ever-changing world.
Nanotechnology
It was coined by Professor Norio Taniguchi to describe semiconductor processes, such as thin
film deposition and ion beam milling exhibiting characteristic control on the order of
nanometer.
It is the understanding and control of matter at dimensions between approximately 1 and 100
nanometers, where unique phenomena enable novel applications. (National Nanotechnology
Initiative)
It is the study of phenomena and fine-tuning of materials at atomic, molecular, and
macromolecular scales, where properties differ significantly from those at a larger scale.
(European Commission)
It refers to a technology or technical details that are between 1 to 100 nanometers in size –it is a
technology that is defined as working with, and/or producing things at atomic level. With
nanotechnology scientists use atoms and molecules to design new materials, components or
systems that have improve new properties.