Animal Technics A Tribute to Don Ihde

Authors
  • Galit Wellner
  • Robert Rosenberger
  • Bas de Boer
  • Lars Botin
  • Anette Forss
  • Catherine Hasse
  • Stacey O. Irwin
  • Jan Kyrre Berg Friis
  • Roisin Lally
  • Richard Lewis
  • Diane Michelfelder
  • Shoji Nagataki
  • Marie Christine Nizzi
  • Soren Riis
  • Peter-Paul Verbeek ORCID logo
Publication date 12-2025
Journal Philosophy and Technology
Article number 176
Volume | Issue number 38 | 4
Number of pages 32
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute of Physics (IoP)
Abstract

This article explores the concept of animal technics, building on the work of Don Ihde to examine the intricate relationships between technology, animals, and human experiences. Drawing from postphenomenology, philosophy of technology and posthumanist thought, the discussion challenges anthropocentric perspectives that frame technology as a purely human domain. Instead, it argues that animals actively shape and are shaped by technics, engaging with tools, environments, and human-mediated technological systems in complex ways. Through a critical engagement with Ihde’s postphenomenology, the article interrogates the co-constitutive interactions between animal life and technology, revealing how nonhuman agency disrupts traditional boundaries between nature and artifact. Case studies illustrate the diverse ways animals participate in technics, from bioengineered species to digital interfaces designed for nonhuman cognition. This analysis highlights the ethical and epistemological stakes of recognizing animals as technological actors, calling for an expanded framework that accounts for their role in shaping technoscientific realities. By situating animal technics within broader debates in philosophy of technology, this article contributes to ongoing discussions about agency, materiality, ecology, and the limits of human-centered technological narratives. It concludes by advocating for a more inclusive and responsive technological ethics—one that acknowledges the entangled futures of humans, animals, and machines.

Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1007/s13347-025-01002-3
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105024873659
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s13347-025-01002-3 (Embargo up to 2026-06-11) (Final published version)
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