'''Technology''' (
Gr. τεχνολογια < τεχνη "craftsmanship" + λογος "word, reckoning" + the suffix ια) has more than one definition. One is the development and application of tools,
machines, materials and
processes that help to solve human problems. As a human activity, technology predates both
science and
engineering. It embodies the human knowledge of solving real problems in the design of standard tools, machines, materials or the process. Thus standardization of design is an essential feature of technology.
Science, Engineering and Technology
Science is the
study of
facts,
phenomena etc.
Engineering is the application of the
knowledge learned scientifically to develop products. Technology is whatever application of scientific and engineering knowledge to achieve a practical result (see P. A. Roussel, K. N. Saad and T. J. Erickson: "Third Generation R&D", HBS Press 1991).
Example:
Flow of
electrons produces
current; this is a fact or
concept in science. When current is passed through a
semiconductor device such as
silicon or
germanium, the mechanism is known as
electronics. The production of an electronic device using the concept of electronics is known as electronics engineering.
Computers are developed using electronics engineering. Using the computer to store digital information, processing it and sending it from one place to another through telecommunication equipments in a secure manner is
information technology.
The term
technology thus often characterizes inventions and
gadgets using recently-discovered scientific principles and processes. However, even very old
inventions such as the
wheel exemplify technology.
Another definition — used by
economics — sees technology as the
current state of our knowledge of how to combine resources to produce desired products (and our knowledge of what can be produced). Thus, we can see
technological change when our technical knowledge increases.
Technology in ideology
Generally, more recently-developed means "better" in regards to technology and engineering. For example, more recently-developed computers are faster than older computers, and more recently-developed cars have greater gas efficiency and more features than older cars.
The notion of
appropriate technology, however, was developed in the
twentieth century to describe situations where it was not desirable to use very new technologies or those that required access to some centralized
infrastructure or parts or skills imported from elsewhere. The eco-village movement emerged in part due to this concern.
Intermediate technology, more of an economics concern, refers to compromises between central and expensive technologies of developed nations and those which developing nations find most effective to deploy given an excess of labour, and scarcity of cash. In general, a so-called "appropriate" technology will also be "intermediate".
On the other hand, opposite assumptions are made by proponents of technoprogressivist views, such as
transhumanism and
singularitarianism, which view
technological development as generally having beneficial effects for the society and the human condition. In these ideologies, technological development is morally good. Some critics see these ideologies as examples of
scientism, mathematical fetishism, or
techno-utopianism.
In
economics, definitions or assumptions of
progress or
growth are often related to one or more of the above assumptions. Challenging prevailing assumptions about technology and its usefulness has led to
alternative ideas like
uneconomic growth or measuring well-being. These, and economics itself, can often be described as technologies, specifically, as
persuasion technology — a concern covered in its own separate article.
Technology can be understood as the
knowledge embodied in
human action to achive practical results. In this sense knowledge is understood as the posibility to bring forth the posible distinctions of the
world to enact the actions of the
body acknowledged to a particular technology.(Heidegger, The Question Concerning Technology)
Concepts in technology
Literature
- Michael Adas, Machines as the Measure of Men: Science, Technology, and Ideologies of Western Dominance, Cornell University Press 1990
- David Noble, Forces of Production: a social history of industrial automation, New York : Knopf 1984, Paperback Edition: Oxford University Press 1990
See also
External links
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