The Indiana Series in the Philosophy of Technology is a collection of works that delve into philosophical questions raised by technology. Given that technology increasingly shapes human experience, this series likely explores a wide range of topics, from the ethics of technological development to the metaphysical implications of our growing reliance on technology.

The book argues that materiality emerges in , not in objects. A hammer is not “material” until it meets a nail, a hand, a task, and a history of carpentry. Extend that to particle accelerators or CRISPR, and you begin to see the chase.