The discourse on technoculture reflects the relationship between humans and technology. Such a relationship is built upon an understanding that humans need technology to increase efficiency. In fact, technocultural discourse produces a way to see and understand the world from a different angle. Up to today, the technocultural life world remains largely unexplored.
The aim of this Journal is to promote a righteous approach to exploration, analysis, and research on philosophy, humanities, culture and anthropology, phenomenology, ethics, religious studies, philosophy of religion, and theology. The scope of this journal allows for philosophy, humanities, ...