Abstract

My considerations are organized into three parts. In the first part I expand upon the influence of the Internet on our experience of space and time as well as our concept of personal identity. This takes place, on the one hand, in the example of text-based Internet services (IRC, MUDs, MOOs), and through the World Wide Web’s (WWW) graphical user-interface on the other. Interactivity, the constitution characteristic for the Internet, stands at the centre of this. In the second part I will show how the World Wide Web in particular sets in motion those semiotic demarcations customary until now. To this end I recapitulate, first of all, the way in which image, language and writing have been set in rela-tion to one another in the philosophical tradition. The multimedia hypertext-uality which characterizes the World Wide Web is then revealed against this background. In the third, and final, part I interpret the World Wide Web’s hypertextual structure as a mediative form of realization of a contemporary type of reason. This takes place on the basis of the philosophical concept of tranversality developed by the German philosopher Wolfgang Welsch.

Highlights

  • That is, the transfer from one semantic realm to another, is the linguistic instrument which allows us to grasp a transition as transition in words

  • Until now I have gone into changes relevant not primarily to the World Wide Web, but to text-based Internet services such as IRC, MUDs and MOOs

  • - if you neglect answering machines - the auditive telephone medium, bounded to the human voice, permits no self-presentation which is independent of one’s own presence. It is exactly this which becomes possible through the World Wide Web

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Summary

Introduction

That is, the transfer from one semantic realm to another, is the linguistic instrument which allows us to grasp a transition as transition in words. The metaphor is an expression which in itself changes, that is,

Translation of a reworked and extended version of Mike Sandbothe
Interactivity
Identity in the Internet
Space and time in the Internet
Interactivity in the mode of appresence
Hypertextuality
Digital Entanglements
Transversality
Literature
Full Text
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