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Weitere Publikationen von Autoren mit dem selben Namen

On Interobjectivity---with discussion by Marc Berg, Michael Lunch abd Yrjo Engelstrom. Mind, Culture and Activity, 3 (4): 228-45 (1996)Tu ne calculeras pas! Ou comment symétriser le don et le capital "Thou shall not calculate!" or How To Symmetricalize Gift and Capital, und . La Revue du M.A.U.S.S., 9 (1): 45-70 (1997)Gabriel Tarde and the End of the Social. The Social in Question. New Bearings in History and the Social Sciences, Routledge, London, (2002)Pragmatogonies: A mythical account of how humans and nonhumans swap properties. American Behavioral Scientist, 37 (6): 791--808 (1994)Politiques de la nature. La découverte, (1999)Comment faire entrer les sciences en democratie.“GIVE ME A GUN AND I WILL MAKE ALL BUILDINGS MOVE”: AN ANT’S VIEW OF ARCHITECTURE, und . Explorations in architecture: Teaching, design, research, (2008)"It is well known that we live in a very different world than that of Euclidian space: phenomenologists (and psychologists of the Gibsonian school) have never tired of showing that there is an immense distance in the way an embodied mind experiences its surroundings from the “objective” shape that “material” objects are said to possess. They have tried to add to the “Galilean” bodies rolling through Euclidian space, “human” bodies ambling through a “lived” environment. I All this is very well, except it does nothing more than to reproduce, at the level of architecture, the usual split between subjective and objective dimensions that has always paralyzed architectural theory—not to mention the well known split it has introduced between the architectural and engineering professions (and not to mention the catastrophic consequences it has had on philosophy proper). What is so strange in this argument is that it takes for granted that engineering drawings on a piece of paper and, later, projective geometry offer a good description of the so-called “material” world. This is the hidden presupposition in the whole of phenomenology: we have to add human subjective intentional dimensions to a “material” world that is well described by geometric shapes and mathematical calculations. The paradoxical aspect of this division of labor envisioned by those who want to add the “lived” dimensions of human perspective to the “objective” necessities of material existence is that, in order to avoid reducing humans to things, they first had to reduce things to drawings." p 82.On Recalling ANT. Actor Network Theory and after, Blackwell Publishing, Oxford, (1999)Pasteur on Lactic Acid Yeast: A Partial Semiotic Analysis. Configurations, 1 (1): 129--46 (1993)Laboratory Life, und . Sage Publications, London, (1979)Science in Action. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, (1987)