thumb|right|alt=Image of Martin Heidegger|Martin Heidegger ' (or Ge-stell, translated as "Enframing" or "positioning'") is a German word used by twentieth-century German philosopher Martin Heidegger to describe what lies behind or beneath modern technology. Heidegger introduced the term in 1954 in The Question Concerning Technology, a text based on the lecture "The Framework" ("Das Gestell") first presented on December 1, 1949, in Bremen. It was derived from the root word stellen, which means "to put" or "to place" and combined with the German prefix Ge-, which denotes a form of "gathering" or
thumb|right|alt=Image of Martin Heidegger|Martin Heidegger ' (or Ge-stell, translated as "Enframing" or "positioning'") is a German word used by twentieth-century German philosopher Martin Heidegger to describe what lies behind or beneath modern technology. Heidegger introduced the term in 1954 in The Question Concerning Technology, a text based on the lecture "The Framework" ("Das Gestell") first presented on December 1, 1949, in Bremen. It was derived from the root word stellen, which means "to put" or "to place" and combined with the German prefix Ge-, which denotes a form of "gathering" or "collection". The term encompasses all types of entities and orders them in a certain way.
==Heidegger's notion of Gestell== Heidegger applied the concept of Gestell to his exposition of the essence of technology. He concluded that technology is fundamentally Gestell, Enframing (more recently translated as "positioning"). As such, the essence of technology is Gestell. Indeed, "Gestell, literally 'framing', is an all-encompassing view of technology, not as a means to an end, but rather a mode of human existence". Heidegger further explained that in a more comprehensive sense, the concept is the final mode of the historical self-concealment of primordial φύσις (physis, usually translated as 'nature').
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).