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The
Robot in the Garden
Telerobotics and Telepistemology
in the Age of the Internet
Edited by Ken Goldberg
The Robot in the Garden initiates
a critical theory of telerobotics and introduces telepistemology, the study
of knowledge acquired at a distance. Many of our most influential technologies,
the telescope, telephone, and television, were developed to provide knowledge
at a distance. Telerobots, remotely controlled robots, facilitate action
at a distance. Specialists use telerobots to explore actively environments
such as Mars, the Titanic, and Chernobyl. Military personnel increasingly
employ reconnaissance drones and telerobotic missiles. At home, we have
remote controls for the garage door, car alarm, and television (the latter
a remote for the remote).
The Internet dramatically extends our scope and reach. Thousands of cameras
and robots are now accessible online. Although the role of technical mediation
has been of interest to philosophers since the seventeenth century, the
Internet forces a reconsideration. As the public gains access to telerobotic
instruments previously restricted to scientists and soldiers, questions
of mediation, knowledge, and trust take on new significance for everyday
life.
Telerobotics is a mode of representation. But representations can misrepresent.
If Orson Welles's "War of the Worlds" was the defining moment
for radio, what will be the defining moment for the Internet? As artists
have always been concerned with how representations provide us with knowledge,
the book also looks at telerobotics' potential as an artistic medium.
Contributors: Albert Borgmann, Tom Campanella, John Canny, Judith Donath,
Hubert Dreyfus, Ken Goldberg, Alvin Goldman, Oliver Grau, Marina Grzinic,
Blake Hannaford, Michael Idinopulos, Martin Jay, Eduardo Kac, Machiko
Kusahara, Jeff Malpas, Lev Manovich, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Eric Paulos,
Catherine Wilson.
March 2000
The MIT Press
A Leonardo Book
ISBN: 0-262-07203-3
330 pp., 49 illus.
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