The Question Concerning Technology
Die Frage nach der Technik — Heidegger's 1953 lecture on the essence of modern technology as a mode of revealing — and as standing-reserve
Tradition: Late Heidegger / continental philosophy of technology
Modern technology's essence is "enframing" — a mode of revealing that reduces all that is to standing-reserve, including humanity itself
The Question Concerning Technology is the central late-Heideggerian text on the philosophy of technology and one of the most consequential twentieth-century philosophical engagements with modernity. Heidegger's central thesis: the "essence" of technology is not itself anything technological but a "mode of revealing" (in his terminology, Gestell — "enframing"). Modern technology reveals the world as standing-reserve (Bestand) — a stockpile of resources awaiting use — and this revealing extends even to human beings, who become "human resources." The danger is not instrumental misuse of technology but the foreclosure of other modes of revealing. Heidegger's closing — "where the danger lies, the saving power also grows" (citing Hölderlin) — opens the question of a different human relationship to technology. The lecture has shaped twentieth-century philosophy of technology (Borgmann, Ihde, the Hubert Dreyfus tradition).
Author
Editions cited
- The Question Concerning Technology and Other Essays (William Lovitt, Harper, 1977)
- Basic Writings (David Farrell Krell, Harper, revised 1993)
School Embodiments
The Question Concerning Technology is one of the central late-Heidegger texts and a foundational document of phenomenology of technology.
"The essence of technology is by no means anything technological." (Question Concerning Technology, opening)
Heidegger's analysis of enframing shaped postmodern critiques of modernity — Foucault's analyses of biopower, Latour's actor-network theory.
"Modern technology is no mere means; it is a way of revealing." (Question Concerning Technology)
Deep ecology (Naess, Foltz, Zimmerman) reads the Question Concerning Technology as one of its philosophical foundations — modern technology's reduction of nature to standing-reserve is the philosophical core of ecological crisis.
"The Rhine is no longer a river... but a water-power supplier." (Question Concerning Technology, on the Rhine power-station)
Heidegger's late event-philosophy (the Ereignis tradition) has process-philosophical features. The Question Concerning Technology is one of the texts where the late-Heideggerian metaphysics of becoming is on display.
"Bringing-forth comes to pass only insofar as something concealed comes into unconcealment." (Question Concerning Technology)
A more distant late-existentialist relationship: the analysis of how technology shapes the human condition has been engaged by existentialist philosophers (Marcel, Berdyaev, Mumford).
"The threat to man does not come in the first instance from the potentially lethal machines and apparatus of technology." (Question Concerning Technology)
Heidegger's relational ontology — being as the relation that gathers thinking and beings — is the framework of the analysis.
"All revealing comes out of the open, goes into the open, and brings into the open." (Question Concerning Technology)
A complicated relationship: critical realists engage Heidegger's analysis of modern technology while resisting his apparently fatalistic framing.
"Modern science's way of representing pursues and entraps nature." (Question Concerning Technology)
Graham Harman's OOO reads the late Heidegger (especially the technology lecture) as the principal twentieth-century resource for a non-anthropocentric ontology that takes things seriously.
"Every revealing brings beings forth out of concealment into unconcealment." (Question Concerning Technology)
A critical engagement: transhumanism reads Heidegger as the principal philosophical opponent of human-technological enhancement (Bostrom critically, Stiegler constructively).
"Man becomes the orderer of what is " unrevealed... and finally even has to take himself as the standing reserve." (Question Concerning Technology)
Continental-philosophical tradition.
Internal Tensions
The relation between Heidegger's 1933 Nazi affiliation and his late critique of modern technology has been the central scholarly controversy. Some commentators (Wolin) read the technology lectures as continuing the political romanticism of the 1933 period; others (Dreyfus, Sheehan) read them as serious philosophy separable from the political contamination. The Black Notebooks (published 2014–2018) revived the question.
I. Time
Modern technology's mode of revealing has its historical-destinal origin and trajectory. Time is the medium of the unfolding of enframing.
Attributes
II. Space
Relational; the Rhine as river is different from the Rhine as standing-reserve.
Attributes
III. Matter
Matter under modern technology is reduced to standing-reserve. Relational ontology — what a thing "is" depends on its mode of revealing.
Attributes
IV. Observer
The late-Heideggerian observer is the human "called forth" by being's revealing. Passive in the precise sense of being addressed; active only in meditative-poetic response.
Attributes
V. Energy
Modern technology's setting-in-order of natural energy is the central analysis. Energy as standing-reserve is the contemporary mode of revealing.
Attributes
VI. Information
Information itself is part of the modern technological setting-in-order. Personal information is included in the standing-reserve.
Attributes
Personas with the nearest attribute fingerprint
Historical figures whose own classification on the same six-dimensional grid lands closest to this work's. Computed by attribute-agreement on coordinates both address.
Computed school proximity
The work's attribute fingerprint scored against all schools using the same quiz scorer. Useful as a sanity check on the hand-curated embodiments above.
How The Question Concerning Technology resolves each dilemma
51 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 22 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 6 unaligned.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.
4 mainstream positions
Matter · 7 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
What stuff is — fundamental, relational, or appearance.
Observer · 37 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Mind, agency, and the knower's relation to the known.