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Máquina y soberanía: para un pensamiento planetario

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456 pages, Unknown Binding

Published February 1, 2026

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About the author

Yuk Hui

24 books156 followers
Yuk Hui studied Computer Engineering and Philosophy at the University of Hong Kong and Goldsmiths College in London, with a focus on philosophy of technology. He currently teaches at the Bauhaus University in Weimar. Between 2012 and 2018 he taught at the institute of philosophy and art (IPK) and Institute of Culture and Aesthetics of Digital Media of the Leuphana University Lüneburg where he wrote his habilitation thesis. He is also a visiting professor at the China Academy of Art where he teaches a master class with Bernard Stiegler every spring. Since 2019 he is Visiting Associate Professor at the School of Creative Media of City University in Hong Kong. Previous to that, he was a research associate at the Institute for Culture and Aesthetics of Media (ICAM), postdoctoral researcher at the Institute for Research and Innovation of the Centre Pompidou in Paris and a visiting scientist at the Deutsche Telekom Laboratories in Berlin. He is initiator of the Research Network for Philosophy and Technology, an international network which facilitates researches and collaborations on philosophy and technology. Hui has published on philosophy of technology and media in periodicals such as Research in Phenomenology, Metaphilosophy, Parrhesia, Angelaki, Theory Culture and Society, Cahiers Simondon, Deleuze Studies, Intellectica, Krisis, Implications Philosophiques, Jahrbuch Technikphilosophie, Techné, Zeitschrift für Medienwissenschaft, Appareil, New Formations,Parallax, etc. He is editor (with Andreas Broeckmann) of 30 Years after Les Immatériaux: Art, Science and Theory (2015), and author of On the Existence of Digital Objects (prefaced by Bernard Stiegler, University of Minnesota Press, March 2016), The Question Concerning Technology in China. An Essay in Cosmotechnics (Urbanomic, December 2016), and Recursivity and Contingency (Rowman & Littlefield International, February 2019). His writings have been translated into a dozen languages.

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5 stars
13 (41%)
4 stars
11 (35%)
3 stars
3 (9%)
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3 (9%)
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1 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Alexander O. Smith.
265 reviews90 followers
October 20, 2025
One of the most important works of philosophy on techno-politics to be published since the turn of the millennium. I have my qualms, but undeniably this work is a monument that can't be ignored and deserves a respectable response.

Despite really appreciating this work, this book does not answer precisely what "technodiversity" is or how it functions in relation to statist politics which is the the ground on which Hui positions the book. That said, it invites a basis on which a plurality of responses can be made. This book invites well formed solutions more than creates them, a point of which Hui seems to find more important. For that, I don't fault the book. The problem is well formed. The solution is to come.
Profile Image for Massimo Atracco.
41 reviews1 follower
March 31, 2026
Empieza muy fuerte, luego se va a pique y luego se recupera, pero no lo suficientemente bien. El primer capítulo, que entroncaba con los temas de las otras obras de la trilogía de la recursividad, me ha parecido muy bueno, y me ha ayudado a entender partes de esas obras que no tenía del todo claras. Las exposiciones de Hegel pasan, porque al final es también un autor trabajado en la trilogía y su dialéctica es un ejemplo de modelo recursivo. La puta brasa que da el colega con Schmitt es lo que ya cansa una barabaridad. Son interesantes las vinculaciones que hace sobre lo mecánico y la crítica su "vitalismo político", pero es que no parece que vayan a ninguna puta parte. A Hui le ha pasado lo de siempre: se tira páginas y páginas con desarrollos de historia de la filosofía que solo vagamente tienen relación con lo que él quiere demostrar y, cuando por fin llega a la parte en la que tendría que exponer sus propias ideas, acaba siendo demasiado breve y demasiado ambiguo.

Con todo, me parece mucho mejor que el desastre que fue Arte y cosmotécnica, y hay algunos desarrollos sobre democracia y tecnodiversidad bastante estimulantes. ¡Si tan solo hubiese profundizado tanto en ellos como en la opinión de Schmitt sobre el avance tecnológico!

Es un buen libro y, a mi juicio, un buen final para la trilogía de la recursividad, pero si recortamos más de un tercio de su contenido no se perdería nada de valor.
Profile Image for R. S. Alamsyah.
14 reviews
September 8, 2025
Hui's Machine and Sovereignty is an attempt at creating a "Tractatus-Technologico-Politicus." Such an ambitious goal entails a synthesis and exploration of various major political ontologies and epistemologies, mechanistic (Cartesian, Hobbesian, etc.) and organistic (Kantian, Hegelian, etc.). It seems at first as an attempt to create an heir to Kant's perpetual peace, advocating for a 'planetary thinking' beyond the nation-state. Hui, instead, interestingly moulds a theory which seeks to both expand and go beyond the theories of Hegel and Carl Schmitt, both who are traditionally read as mere nationalists. In the end, he carves out a systematic political philosophy based on a vision of a planetary polity which reconciles political universality with geographic localism qua 'technodiversity,' which intends on bringing about a technological reason that isn't limited to European and American rationality.

Hui amalgamates different theories, from Georgescu-Roegen's entropic economics, Wiener's Cybernetics, and Karatani's capital-nation-state to illustrate his view. The breadth of his references is diverse, but it weighs down on the readability and the coherence of "Machine and Sovereignty." Hui's original thought feels buried. The book could have benefited from an increase in length, and an expanded exploration of his normative ideas.
Profile Image for D.
314 reviews36 followers
March 20, 2025
Lo peor que ha escrito Yuk Hui. No resuelve el problema planteado entre tecnodiversidad y planetariedad, y apenas piensa esta última. Es más bien una exposición de los sistemas de Hegel y Schmitt acompañada de algunas ideas propias.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews