This document outlines 4 meanings for both technology and science:
1. Technics/Knowledge - Referring to material products/organized body of knowledge
2. Technology/Science - Referring to complex of knowledge used to make technics/field of inquiry
3. Form of human activity - Referring to distinctive cultural activities like art/medicine
4. Total societal enterprise - Referring to all people, skills, organizations devoted to research and development of technics/study of nature
It provides examples and explanations for understanding each meaning in the context of technology and science.
This document outlines 4 meanings for both technology and science:
1. Technics/Knowledge - Referring to material products/organized body of knowledge
2. Technology/Science - Referring to complex of knowledge used to make technics/field of inquiry
3. Form of human activity - Referring to distinctive cultural activities like art/medicine
4. Total societal enterprise - Referring to all people, skills, organizations devoted to research and development of technics/study of nature
It provides examples and explanations for understanding each meaning in the context of technology and science.
This document outlines 4 meanings for both technology and science:
1. Technics/Knowledge - Referring to material products/organized body of knowledge
2. Technology/Science - Referring to complex of knowledge used to make technics/field of inquiry
3. Form of human activity - Referring to distinctive cultural activities like art/medicine
4. Total societal enterprise - Referring to all people, skills, organizations devoted to research and development of technics/study of nature
It provides examples and explanations for understanding each meaning in the context of technology and science.
This document outlines 4 meanings for both technology and science:
1. Technics/Knowledge - Referring to material products/organized body of knowledge
2. Technology/Science - Referring to complex of knowledge used to make technics/field of inquiry
3. Form of human activity - Referring to distinctive cultural activities like art/medicine
4. Total societal enterprise - Referring to all people, skills, organizations devoted to research and development of technics/study of nature
It provides examples and explanations for understanding each meaning in the context of technology and science.
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Science Technology and Society
Four Meanings of Technology
TECHNOLOGY
Technics
A technology
A form of human cultural activity
A total societal enterprise
Technology as Technics
• Technology will sometimes be used to mean and refer to
material products of human making or fabrication borrowing Lewis Mumford's term, I will call such items technics. • Technics- are the material artifacts (to use anthropological term) or “hardware” (to use at engineering term) produced by a person, group, or society. Technology as Technics • There are various, sometimes overlapping, subcategories of technics, including tools, devices, machines, implements, istruments, and utensils. • Thus, computers, bicycles, contact lenses, hammers, axes, watches, guns, forks microscopes, and, for that matter, clothing, buildings, pianos, and statues all fall within the general category of technics. Technology as Technics
• To be precise, as used here, technic does not refer
directly or primarily to a particular individual, devices, machines, and so on. Rather, it is to be understood as referring to generic types or kinds of devices, machines and so on-to the watch, the axe, the videocassette recorder, the dishwasher, the personal computer, rather than to my watch, your axe, and so on. Technology as a Technology
• Here, unlike in the previous sense, technology does not
refer directly or primarily to a particular technic itself (namely, the bicycle.) • Rather, a technology refers to the complex of knowledge, methods, materials, and, if applicable, constituent parts (technics themselves) used in making a certain kind of technic (at a certain point in time). Technology as a Technology
• Technology in this sense can be used in either the
singular or the plural-that is, to refer either to a technology or to two or more technologies, as in “many technologies are involved in the manufacture of an automobile, such as brake technology, carburetor technology, engine technology, and transmission technology.” Technology as a Form of Human Cultural Activity
• Technology will often be used to refer to a distinctive form
or kind of human cultural activity, just as the terms art, law, medicine, sport, and religion are often used to refer to disctinctive forms of human practice. • In this sense, technology is a type of endeavor of which certain people, technologists-a category including craftspeople and machinists as well as professional engineers-are practitioners, just as artists are practitioners of art and physicians are practitioners of medicine. Technology as a Total Societal enterprise
• “Here, technology does not refer only to the specific
technics and related technologies involved, or to one of the activity forms-technology-through which they were invented or developed. Technology as a Total Societal enterprise
• Rather, it refers to the total societal enterprise of
technology-that is, the complex of knowledge, people, skills, organizations, facilities, technics, physical resources, methods, and technologies that, taken together and in relationship to one another, are devoted to the research, development, production and operation of technics (at a given point in time in a particular societal unit, be it national or global scope.) Four Meanings of Science
SCIENCE
Knowledge
a field of systematic inquiry into nature
A form of human cultural activity
A total societal enterprise
• An important distinction must first be made about uses of the term science. • In its most general sense, one carried by the German term Wissenschaft, science means “systematic theoretical inquiry.” • Thus understood, we may immediately distinguish Formal Science- including logic and mathematics, wherin abstract symbols do not necessarily refer to phenomena of the natural world, from what might be called Substantive Science- including physics, biology, psychology, and sociology. In the latter areas, science takes phenomena of the natural world (including mental and social phenomena) as its object. Science as Knowledge
“With his germ theory of disease, Pasteur made a seminal
contribution to modern medical science.” Science- refers to the organized, well-founded body of knowledge of natural phenomena, contributions to which have been made by thousands of men and women. Science as a Field of Systematic Inquiry into Nature
In “physics is the most basic science.”
Science- refers to a particular field or domain of systematic inquiry in which such knowledge-science in the first sense -is sought. • As with the second sense of technology, science in this second sense can be used in either the singular or the plural (“the science of physics” versus “the social sciences”) Science as a Form of Human Cultural Activity
• Corresponding to the third sense of technology, science
will sometimes be used in what follows to refer to a distinctive form or kind of human cultural activity, one practiced by people now called scientists and formerly known as, among other things, natural philosophers and savants. Science as a Total Societal Enterprise
• Paralleling the situation with technology, the expression
“science” is sometimes used to refer to the total societal enteprise of science-that is,the complex of knowledge, people, skills, organizations, facilities, technics, physical resources, methods, and technologies that, taken together and in relationship to one another, are devoted to the study and understanding of the natural world (at a given point in time in a particular societal unit), the latter understood as including in its domain all human mental, physical, and social phenomena. Four Meanings of Technology and Science TECHNOLOGY SCIENCE
Technics Knowledge
A technology a field of systematic inquiry into nature
A form of human cultural activity A form of human cultural activity
A total societal enterprise A total societal enterprise