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Triangulations: Reflections on Being Human is where I explore the tangled intersections of technology, culture, and human life. Drawing on my background in philosophical anthropology, philosophy of technology, and film, I’ve been using this space to think through what it means to be human in an age of smart machines, digital networks, and social robots. My essays range from reflections on cinematic narratives to meditations on robots, domestic technologies and fabric arts, all in service of articulating a new posthuman ontology of the person—one that recognizes our embodied, relational, and technologically entangled condition. Triangulations is a place for public philosophy: rigorous, accessible, and grounded in the belief that rethinking the human is one of the urgent tasks of our time.

Dennis Weiss

About Me



I am a retired Professor of Philosophy from York College of Pennsylvania, with a B.A. from Emory University and a Ph.D. from the University of Texas at Austin. My work focuses on philosophical anthropology, technology, and popular culture, and I’ve co-edited Interpreting Man (2003) and Design, Mediation, and the Posthuman (2014), with Designing the Domestic Posthuman forthcoming from Bloomsbury Press. I’ve published widely on the posthuman, science fiction, and philosophy of technology, and I’m currently developing a new project, Posthuman Second Persons. I also curate the film series Philosophy, Drink, Film at Zoetropolis Cinema Stillhouse.

 © 2025 Dennis Weiss. All rights reserved.

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