Author Archive
Ancient instincts, modern hardware: paranoia and medical imaging and surveillance technics

Ancient instincts, modern hardware: paranoia and medical imaging and surveillance technics

Paranoia, said Philip K Dick, is “a modern-day development of an ancient, archaic sense...” Reflecting on Dick's theory, this paper offers a ontological interpretation of paranoia in which medical scanners and clinical surveillance technics are 'paranoiacally' imagined as sources of predatory and persecutorial affect.
Invention and the tekhnēcolor labcoat: Scientific history’s psychotropic trace

Invention and the tekhnēcolor labcoat: Scientific history’s psychotropic trace

This paper examines how LSD — little understood or examined by contemporary science, and almost always comprehended through the lens of its ignominious history — resides interstitially between an unpotentiated tekhnē and an oblique fabula.