The essence of technology is by no
means anything technological
- Martin Heidegger
Science and Technology are at the forefront
of our society today. Much that we do deals with
research, progress, and development in the
ever-growing technological sectors. Technology
changes us and the world around us in countless
ways. It makes work easier, cures various
diseases, provides abundant food supply and
potable water, enables communication and travel
across the globe, and expands our knowledge
of the natural environment. It has brought us
longer and healthier lives, freedom from physical
and mental drudgery, and many new creative
possibilities.
But technology has always been a double-
edge sword, empowering both our creative
and our destructive natures. Technological
advancement is not without complication, and
even ardent proponents of technology recognize
that our present age of innovation is fraught
with concern for unintended consequences. For
instance, technology that eases our labor can
detach us from a meaningful sense of work.
What can cure disease can encourage us to view
the human body as something to be engineered,
modified, and immortalized. Techniques that
produce more food from less land can have
numerous, long-term effects in the natural
environment. Likewise, even as technology
makes possible instant communication with
others around the world, it often creates distance
between ourselves and people near to us;
while it enables unprecedented mobility, it can
undermine the stability necessary for families
and communities to thrive. As technology
provides ever-increasing knowledge, we quite
reasonably wonder whether such knowledge is
being used to bring out a wiser, more just world.
How should we understand and evaluate
both the promise and peril of the things we
create? What implications arise from our
understanding of what it means to be human
and live well? Definitely, the basic principles
of ethics and morality should not change as a
result of new technologies. It is important to fully
understand the basics of human interaction to
make accurate judgments on human flourishing.
Human flourishing is defined as an effort to
achieve self-actualization and fulfillment within
the context of a larger community of individuals,
each with the right to pursue his or her own such
efforts. It encompasses the uniqueness, dignity,
diversity, freedom, happiness, and holistic well-
being of the individual within the larger family,
community, and population. Achieving human
flourishing is a life-long existential journey of
hopes, achievements, regrets, losses, illnesses,
sufferings, and coping.
Catholicism and Islam are home to long!
traditions of philosophieal, theological, and
legal reflection on the nature and dignity of
the human person and the value of scientific
knowledge. The idea that men and women
are of divine origin and, therefore, possess an
inviolable dignity is a starting point for both
traditions. The human person and the human
body are divine gifts deserving of unconditional
respect. In both the Catholic and Muslim world
views, God endowed human beings with reason
as a means to communicate with one another, to
strive after truth, and to care for His creation.
Science and technology are recognized as
positive in principle but can also like human
enterprises, serve evil ends.
Karl Marx, a revolutionary socialist, posits
that in our daily lives we take decisions that have
unintended consequences, which then combine to
create large-scale social forces that may have an
utterly unpredicted effect. He states that humans
are naturally social beings, and therefore, society
is the essential unity of man in nature." The
decisions we make as a society should take into
account the nature of our social relations and the
potential consequences.
Marx argues that to achieve true human
flourishing, we as individuals must first overcome
the different mechanisms of alienation to express
our full humanity in relation both to nature
and one another, and he frames this argument
within the subtext of alienated labor. He defines
alienation as the estrangement of humans from
aspects of human nature. This human nature
consists of the particular set of vital drives and
tendencies that man expresses, and, therefore,
alienation can be said to be a state in which
these human drives and tendencies are stunted
to some degree. As the worker produces more, he
becomes more alien to the object of his labor, his
product. This objectification of labor establishes
what Marx calls "the loss of and subservience to
the object, and the appropriation as alienation."
What does this mean in the greater scheme of
things? Let us consider the example of a modern
factory worker. The factory worker comes to work
daily and begins his line of work, which is usually
a specific task with the larger framework of the
factory. Let us assume he works at an automobile
factory. The product of his labor is the automobile,
a product that this worker will most likely pass
on through the system without considering it
beyond the scope of his work. The factory worker
does not associate with this product once it
has been passed, though the factory benefits
from the production of this item. As a matter
of fact, the factory will benefit more as the
worker produces more product while the worker
thinks less and less of the actual product of his
labor. The labor becomes a means of procuring
some means of survival within the system, and
the worker is detached from the product of
his work altogether. Despite the mechanistic
character of this image, the factory worker motif
is applicable to our modern consideration of
genetic intervention. In considering this Marxian
system of alienation described above, genetic
intervention brings one more consumer product
into this world, the human individual himself.
Genetic intervention simply presents itself as
potentially developing into another consumer
choice, further establishing the mechanism of
alienation from product, the product being the
individual. In a world where human individuals
could possibly be altered or modified in the
hopes of establishing some sort of enhancement,
the individual himself becomes the object or
product of labor. In principle, man is alienated
from this product and cannot use this product
as a tool of self-expression. Therefore, the idea
of genetically intervening in the production
of human individuals not only objectifies the
human person but also distorts the individual
as a mirror of himself (Thomas, 2011).
Aristotle (384-322 B.C.) is the fountainhead
behind every achievement of science technology,
political theory, and aesthetics, especially
romantic art in today's world, His philosophy
has underpinned the achievements of the
Renaissance and of all scientific advances and
technological progress to this very day. Aristotle
teaches that each man's life has a purpose, and
that the function of one's life is to attain that
purpose. He explains that the purpose of life
is earthly happiness or flourishing that can be
achieved via reason and the acquisition of virtue.
Articulating an explicit and clear understanding
of the end toward which a person's life aims,
Aristotle states that each human being should
use his abilities to their fullest potential
and should obtain happiness and enjoyment
through the exercise of their realized capacities.
He contends that human achievements are
animated by purpose and autonomy and that
people should take pride in being excellent at
what they do. According to Aristotle, human
beings have a natural desire and capacity to
know and understand the truth, to pursue moral
excellence, and to instantiate their ideals in the
world through action.
Technology as a way of Revealing
Technology is therefore no mere means. It is a way of
revealing. If we heed to this, then another whole
realm for the essence of technology will open itself
up to us. It is the realm of revealing, that is the
truth. - Martin Heidegger
Martin Heidegger, a German philosopher,
wrote an essay, "The Question Concerning
Technology," which addresses modern technology
and its essence as an instrumental way of
revealing the world. Technology is slipping out
of control and its nature as an instrument causes
frustration and excites the will to remaster it.
which is a large factor in the growing discomfort
with modern technology. He goes beyond the
traditional view of technology as machines and
technical procedures. Moreover, he tries to think
through the essence of technology as a way in
which we encounter entities generally, including
nature, ourselves, and, indeed, everything. That
is to say, we conceive modern technology as
means to achieve ends. As being instrumental,
the essence of technology concerns causality.
A deeper look into causality reveals that the
end is the beginning: a cause is that to which
something is indebted, and the purpose for which
an instrument is designed is the primary cause
of its coming into being.
Heidegger's understanding of technology
was based on its essence. First, the essence of
technology is not something we make; it is a
mode of being or of revealing. This means that
technological things have their own novel kind
of presence, endurance, and connections among
parts and wholes. They have their own way of
presenting themselves and the world in which
they operate. The essence of technology is, for
Heidegger, not the best or most characteristic
instance of technology, nor is it a nebulous
generality, a form or idea. Rather, to consider
technology essentially is to see it as an event to
which we belong: the structuring, ordering, and
"requisitioning" of everything around us, and of
ourselves. The second point is that technology
even holds sway over beings that we do not
normally think of as technological, such as gods!
and history. Third, the essence of technology
as Heidegger discusses it is primarily a matter
of modern and industrial technology. He is
less concerned with the ancient and old tools
and techniques that antedate modernity; the
essence of technology is revealed in factories
and industrial processes, not in hammers and
plows. And fourth, for Heidegger, technology is
not simply the practical application of natural
science. Instead, modern natural science can
understand nature in the characteristically
scientific manner only because nature has
already, in advance, come to light as a set of
calculable, orderable forces that is to say,
technologically.
According to him there are two characteristics
of modern technology as a revealing process,
First, the mode of revealing modern technology
is challenging. Things are revealed or brought
forth by challenging or demanding them. It is
putting to nature the unreasonable demand
that it supply energy that can be extracted
and stored. The mining technology today is a
good example for this mode of revealing things.
Tracks of land reveal as something challenged
because man sees them as objects where coal and
ore can be demanded. Man sees them as source
of energy. These energies can be stored so that
man can summon them at his bidding. Shortly,
nature reveals itself in modern technology as
things of manipulation, as things that yield
energy whenever man demands them to do so.
"Challenging" as a mode of revealing nature
could be sharply contrasted to "Physis, which is
the arising of something from itself, a bringing-
forth or poieses. A flower blossoming or fading in
the changes of the season is an example of this
form of revealing. The revelation has its own
autonomy, and at best, man can only witness.
This is a natural way of revealing.
The mode of revealing in modern technology
has brought about new world ordering. This
kind of ordering is best described as "artificial"
in contrast to natural ordering." It sees nature
as an object of manipulation and not anymore
as an autonomous reality demanding respect
and admiration. The network of things is now
reduced into the network of manipulation. The
second characteristic of modern technology as a
revealing process is that of challenging, which
brings forth the energy of nature as expediting.
In the modern use of the word, expediting
means to hasten the movement of something.
However, in its original sense, expediting is also
a process of revealing inasmuch as it "unlocks"
and "exposes" something. But what is exposed is
still directed toward something else, i.e., toward
the maximum yield at the minimum expense. In
short, things that are revealed in an expedited
manner are brought forth as resources that must
be used efficiently. In mining, for example, man
digs coal not simply to know what coals are. Yes,
man "exposes" these coals but not simply to know
them. They uncover them because he wants to
use them. Coals are mined from truckloads of
land to use their energy. This is the characteristic
of the things revealed in modern technology. They
are there "for something.
Heidegger uses a technical word to name the
things that are revealed in modern technology
as "standing in reserve." Things as standing in
Teserve are not "objects." Objects, on the other
hand, are things that "stand against us" as
things with autonomy. They are revealed mainly
in human thinking and do not allow further
manipulations. Things as standing in reserve,
on the other hand, are called to come forth in
challenging and expediting. They are reduced
into the objectlessness of modern technology.
Nothing anymore "stands against us" as objects
of autonomy and wonder. Everything is regressed
into an interlocking of things that yield what
man wants whenever he demands them to do
so. Even nature is now revealed as standing in
reserve and not anymore objects of autonomy.
Unlike the modern technologies, the old
technology still respects nature as an object of
autonomy. The modern and the old technologies
are of different modes of revealing, the former,
artificial and the latter, natural. Take for
example, the contrast between how the modern
technology of the hydropower plant and the old
technology of a wooden bridge reveal the presence
of a river. The hydropower plant reveals the river
that supplies it energy simply as another thing
standing in reserve. It is a source of energy
that completes the interlocking of things in the
system of hydropower generation. The river is
not anymore seen as an object with autonomy
but an object on call to be used.Conversely, the
technology of building a wooden bridge reveals
the river not as a key link in completing the
bridge; rather it respects it as a part of nature,
a "landscape," using Heidegger's own term, that
is somewhat permanent and stand against us
as another entity. We move "around" it so to say,
and we only see what we can do to overcome its
dominating presence; in other words, we do not
manipulate it, but rather, we act according to
its rules.
For Heidegger en-framing is the "essence"
of modern technology. En-framing simply means
putting into the frame of modern technology
everything in nature. This "frame" of modern
technology is the network or interlocking things
standing in reserve. It is the world centered on
man's caprices and demands. It is a world of
manipulation and demystification. Here nothing
is mysterious anymore. This is what Heidegger
was afraid of, that the process of truth will revert
to the realm of erring. It must be remembered
that for truth to be, it must retain its sense of
mystery. Truth is for the most part untruth.
To disregard this essentially limited process of
revelation is also to disregard the entirety of its
essence. We cannot have absolute knowledge of
reality, more so, we cannot have full dominion
over it. As they say, we are only "guardians of
creation. To disregard this nature of reality is
also putting ourselves into the brink of danger
(Blitz, 2014).
Because of man's arrogance, nature is on the
verge of destruction. He thinks he knows how
nature works and tends to hasten or "expedite"
its processes. He demands too much from it and
in turn disrupts its natural flow. Nature is beyond
our control. Its truth is beyond our grips. For
all we know, it is the one that controls us. If we
ever try to dominate it, nature will surely revolt
against us in a very humbling manner.
Human Flourishing
Every man must decide whether he will walk in the
light of creative altruism or in the darkness of
destructive selfishness - Martin Luther, Jr
Human flourishing is said to be the best
translation for the Greek word Eudaimonia,
which for both 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. It is, thus, inseparable from
self-awareness and self-cultivation, and this
"self," far from being an isolated individual,
is experientially and practically a center of
relationships.
The affirmation that human flourishing
implies development of the individual in his
intellectual, affective, moral, and spiritual
dimensions obviously needs elaboration. Plato,
in the Republic, contends that the soul or mind
has three motivating parts: rational, spirited
or emotional, and appetitive. Each of these
has its own desired ends, and Eudaimonid or
human flourishing requires an ordering of this
tripartite structure of the soul: the rational and
spirited parts. Virtue ensues. In the same vein,
Aristotle, in the Nicomachean Ethics, states that
Eudaimonia is constituted not by honor or wealth
power but by rational activity in accordance
with excellence in the virtues of character,
including courage, honesty, pride, friendliness,
and wittiness, the intellectual virtues-notably
rationality and judgment, as well as mutually
beneficial friendships and scientific knowledge,
particularly of things that are fundamental and
unchanging (www.elliottdacher.org/center-for-
human-flourishing.html).
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. In Aristotle's
schema, there are four aspects of human nature:-
physical, emotional, social, and rational. As physical
beings, we require nourishment, exercise, rest, and
all the other things that it takes to keep our bodies
functioning properly. As emotional beings, 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,
For humans, these wants can get pretty complex,
but at rock bottom we all have emotional needs
and wants that spring from rather basic sources.
As social beings, 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. As entional beings, we are
creative, expressive, knowledge-seeking and able
to obey reason. We may not always obey reason,
and we may sometimes not want to exercise our
minds, but a large part of our existence relates to
our being rational animals. An individual cannot
truly flourish if he is not flourishing in one of the
four aspects of human nature.
Human flourishing also known as personal
flourishing involves the rational use of one's
individual potentialities, including talents,
abilities, and virtues in the pursuit of his freely
and rationally chosen values and goaler An
action is considered to be proper if it leads to the
flourishing of the person performing the action.
Human flourishing is, at the same time, a moral
accomplishment and a fulfillment of human
capacities, and it is one through being the other.
Self-actualization is moral growth and viceversa.
Not an abstraction, human flourishing is
real and highly personal by nature; it consists
of the fulfillment of both man's human nature
and unique potentialities, and is concerned with
choices and actions that necessarily deal with
the particular and the contingent. One man's
self-realization is not the same as another's.
What is called for in terms of concrete actions,
such as choice of career, education, friends, home,
and others, varies from person to person. 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. The idea of human flourishing is
inclusive and can encompass a wide variety
of constitutive ends, such as knowledge, the
development of character traits, productive
work, religious pursuits, community building,
love, charitable activities, allegiance to persons
and causes, self-efficacy, material well-being,
pleasurable sensations, etc.
To flourish, a man must pursue goals that
are both rational for him as an individual and
as a human being. Whereas the former will vary
depending upon one's particular circumstances,
the latter are common to man's distinctive
nature - man has the unique capacity to live
rationally. The use of reason is a necessary, but
not a sufficient, condition for human flourishing.
Living rationally i.e., consciously ) means
dealing with the world conceptually. Living
consciously implies respect for the facts of reality.
The principle of living consciously is not affected
by the degree of one's intelligence nor the extent
of one's knowledge, rather, it is the acceptance
of use of one's reason in the recognition and
perception of reality and in his choice of values
and actions to the best of his ability, whatever
that ability may be. To pursue rational goals
through rational means is the only way to cope
successfully with reality and achieve one's goals.
Although rationality is not always rewarded,
the fact remains that it is through the use of
one's mind that a man not only discovers the
values required for personal flourishing, but
also he attains them. Values can be achieved in
reality if a man recognizes and adheres to the
reality of his unique personal endowments and
contingent circumstances. 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, Practical reason can be used to choose,
create, and integrate all the values and virtues that comprise personal flourishing.