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What Is Meaningful Human-Computer Interaction? Understanding Freedom, Responsibility, and Noos in HCI Based on Viktor Frankl’s Existential Philosophy

Quynh Nguyen, Julia Himmelsbach, Diotima Bertel, Olivia Zechner, Manfred Tscheligi

2022Designing Interactive Systems Conference10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Meaningfulness is a profound aspect of our lives. So far, a concrete reflection of what meaning means in HCI is still rare. To understand users as humans, and thus, the humanity in being a user, we adopt Viktor Frankl’s understanding of users as meaning-seeking subjects. To make the concept of meaningfulness more graspable, we refer to what Frankl calls the three existentials of life: freedom, responsibility, and noos. We elaborate four dimensions, namely the existentials as an outcome, as their embeddedness in technology, their role in interaction, and their (non-)usage. This is followed by a discussion on the interwovenness of the three existentials as well as their potential impact on HCI research. By that, we aim to contribute to a profound understanding of meaning for HCI, from the epistemological to the methodological perspective, to enable meaning-centered design.

Topics & Concepts

Meaning (existential)ExistentialismPerspective (graphical)HumanityReflection (computer programming)EpistemologyComputer sciencePsychologyPhilosophyArtificial intelligenceTheologyProgramming languageInnovative Human-Technology InteractionPersona Design and ApplicationsTechnology Use by Older Adults
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