English

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Etymology

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From τέχνη (tékhnē) + νοητικός (noētikós), coined by British artist Roy Ascott in 1997.

Adjective

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technoetic (comparative more technoetic, superlative most technoetic)

  1. Combining technology and consciousness.
    • 1997 June 19, Roy Ascott, The Connective State: Europe's technoetic dimension[1]:
    • 1998, Christa Sommerer, Laurent Mignonneau, Art @ Science, page 286:
      So within the telematic embrace we hope to reach this social synchronicity, an identical rhythm of the heart, a dynamic technoetic equilibrium.
    • 2000, Stephen Aldhouse-Green, Paviland Cave and the 'Red Lady': A Definitive Report, page 227:
      The 'Red Lady' in his palaeoecological and technoetic context (chapter title)
    • 2014, Norbert Herber, “Musical Behavior and Amergence in Technoetic and Media Arts”, in Karen Collins, Bill Kapralos, Holly Tessler, editors, The Oxford Handbook of Interactive Audio, page 365:
      Amergent music is a generative style developed to complement the innate dynamics or ontology of technoetic environments.

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