It's not (just) about the robots: care and carelessness across an automated supply chain

Research output: ThesisDissertation (TU Delft)

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Abstract

What started off as rather tame research on integrating care into retail robots, ended up as a creative and political call to upend increasingly automated food systems. Ley argues that robotics are the next step in a long history of separation from the human and non-human life involved in getting food on the table. The dissertation itself documents the author's unravelling as she comes to a concluding ethical vision: a messy and inefficient life of interconnection, led by the senses.

The dissertation draws together myriad academic fields, from philosophy of technology, phenomenology, robot-ethics, feminist theory, ethics of care, science and technology studies, and decolonial practices. Woven around the traditional academic chapters are poems, stories, creative prose, post-its, and photographs. By stretching into the creative and intuitive realms, the dissertation envisions what philosophy of technology might look like.
Original languageEnglish
QualificationDoctor of Philosophy
Awarding Institution
  • Delft University of Technology
Supervisors/Advisors
  • Roeser, S., Promotor
  • Santoni De Sio, F., Promotor
Award date10 Dec 2024
Print ISBNs978-94-6384-694-3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Keywords

  • care-ethics
  • Robot Ethics
  • Applied Ethics
  • Food systems

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