Hermeneutics, History, and Technology 1st Edition
Discover a timely exploration at the intersection of interpretation, time, and innovation with Hermeneutics, History, and Technology — 1st Edition. This compact yet profound volume invites readers to rethink how we read technological artifacts, narrate past developments, and apply interpretive theory to contemporary challenges.
Drawing on clear, accessible scholarship, the book maps key hermeneutic approaches and places them in conversation with historiography and the study of technological change. Chapters guide you from foundational principles of interpretation to applied analyses of tools, infrastructures, and digital systems, offering both conceptual clarity and concrete examples. Ideal for graduate students, scholars in philosophy and history of technology, policy analysts, and curious professionals, the text sharpens critical thinking and methodological skill.
What you’ll gain: sharper frameworks for interpreting artifacts and texts; comparative perspectives that link local case studies to global technological trends; and practical approaches to integrate hermeneutic insight into research, teaching, and policy. Its interdisciplinary lens makes it a valuable course supplement or reference for departments across North America, Europe, Asia, and beyond.
Readable yet rigorous, Hermeneutics, History, and Technology is designed to deepen your understanding of how meaning, context, and innovation shape one another. Add this 1st Edition to your collection to enrich seminars, inform research projects, or bring a fresh interpretive voice to debates about technology’s past and future. Order now to begin a more thoughtful engagement with the histories and meanings of technology.
Note: eBooks do not include supplementary materials such as CDs, access codes, etc.


