Tournament: UMKC | Round: | Opponent: | Judge:
The Aff is characterized by Gestall: the multiplicity of differences which characterize Being are enframed as a standing reserve. As everything is leveled into raw material for technological ordering, industrial agriculture becomes synonymous with atomic weaponry
Belu 10 [Dana, Department of Philosophy California State University, Inquiry Vol. 53 Issue 1, pg. 4-5. “Heidegger’s Aporetic Ontology of Technology,” February 2010]
Machine technology is...the production of hydrogen bombs. 25
The purposes and possibilities for energy generation are channeled through technological thinking; all Beings can be reduced to an energy source
O’Brien 4 (Mahon, Professor of Philosophy at University College, Cork, Ireland, “Commentary on Heidegger’s ‘The Question Concerning Technology,” Thinking Together. Proceedings of the IWM Junior Fellows' Conference, http://www.iwm.at/publ-jvc/jc-16-01.pdf)
It is a charge which many are wont to make...radically different filtration systems.
Even debate is controlled by Gestall: by treating the resolution as self-evident and subordinating the truth of the resolution to the efficiency-maximizing goals of traditional policy debate, the revealing nature of debate is severed in the name of technological massification
Heidegger 53 [Martin, Introduction to Metaphysics trans. Fried and Polt (Yale University Press: 2000), pp. 49-53]
1. One decisive aspect is ...and a figure of speech.
Dillon 96 [Michael, professor Politics and International Relations at the University of Lancaster, The Politics of Security, pp. 75-76]
I recognise the danger ...singularity of the political.
Technological enframing becomes intelligibility itself—this reduces the value to life to mere standing reserve
Thomson 4 (Iain, Dept. of Philosophy, Univ. of New Mexico. “Ontology and Ethics at the Intersection of Phenomenology and Environmental Philosophy”, published in Ecophenomenology: Back to the Earth Itself copyright 03. PDF accessed July 2, 2008 p. 396)
The later Heidegger’s ontological critique of ‘enframing...attention through technological means.
This authorizes and drives mass killings—technology is an organizational force that sanctions genocide in the name of pure order
Szabo 2Matt Szabo, PhD Candidate in Geography at The University of Manchester, “Managerial ecology: Zygmunt Bauman and the gardening culture of modernity,” Environments, Vol. 30, No. 3, 2002, p. proquest
The leitmotif of Bauman's book...circumstances are less visible (Bauman 1989:93- 94).
The United States federal government should substantially reduce restrictions on and/or substantially increase financial incentives for energy production in the United States of one or more of the following: coal, crude oil, natural gas, nuclear power, solar power, wind power
Douzinas 2k [Costas, Professor of Law and Head of the School of Law at Birkbeck College, University of London, The End of Human Rights: Critical Legal Thought at the Turn of the Century, p. 201-09)
Martin Heidegger, one of the most powerful...horrors of metaphysical arrogance?
Waddington 5 A Field Guide to Heidegger: Understanding 'The Question concerning Technology' more by David Waddington Educational Philosophy and Theory, Vol. 37, No. 4, 2005 http://concordia.academia.edu/DavidWaddington/Papers/538046/A_Field_Guide_to_Heidegger_Understanding_The_Question_concerning_Technology
Most essays on technology focus....open space of destining’ (Heidegger, 1977, p. 26).
Heidegger and Spiegel 66. “Heidegger, Der Spiegel Interview” Philosophy Today 20 (Whiter 1976): 267-284. Scanned from Gunther Neske and Emil Kettering (eds), Martin Heidegger and National Socialism, New York: Paragon House, 1990, pp. 41-66.
SPIEGEL: You apparently see, so you have expressed it, ...HEIDEGGER: But not directly.
Dillon 99 [Michael, “The Scandal of the Refugee: Some Reflections on the ‘Inter’ of International Relations and Continental Thought,” in Moral Spaces: Rethinking Ethics and World Politics, eds. David Campbell and Michael Shapiro (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1999) pg. 97-99]
As Heidegger-himself...of modern political thought.