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Encyclopedia > Technological

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 standardisation of design is an essential feature of technology.


Science, Engineering and Technology:


Science is the study of natural facts. Engineering is the application of the knowledge learned scientifically to develop products. Technology is use of the engineered product.


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 characterises 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.

Contents

Technology in ideology

Very often, new is assumed to mean "better" in technology and engineering circles. The notion of appropriate technology 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 evolved 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, an "appropriate" technology will also be "intermediate".


Exactly contrary assumptions are made by those who promote transhumanism, posthumanism, technological singularity, which collectively were described as "Cosmist" views by Hugo de Garis. In these ideologies, technological development is morally good. These ideologies are seen as symptoms of scientism and mathematical fetishism by those who use those terms. Some consider them also to be symptoms of belief in 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 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.


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

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:

External links

  • Confronting Technology (http://www.gemair.com/~lmonke/)
  • hongkong Technology (http://www.hktrip.net/)
  • CTHEORY - international journal of theory, technology, and culture (http://www.ctheory.net/default.asp)
  • Lebanese (http://www.lebgeeks.com/)Technology Community

Major fields of technology

Edit (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/wiki.phtml?title=MediaWiki:Technology-footer&action=edit)
Biotechnology | Computing technology | Electrical engineering | Electronics | Microtechnology | Nanotechnology | Biomedical engineering | Energy storage | Machinery | Space technology | Nuclear technology | Visual technology | Weapons technology | Telecommunication | Transport

  Results from FactBites:
 
Technological Literacy Reconsidered (2533 words)
Many people have written on the subject of technological literacy, all of whom are to be commended for their efforts to describe the complexities of the individual who is literate in technology.
Johnson (1989) conceives of technological literacy to be subsumed under scientific literacy with the former type of person having an understanding of the generation of new technology, its control and its uses.
It is not possible to define technological literacy, or measure it, in the absence of an agreed upon intellectual domain for technolgy education.
20th WCP: Technological "Paradigms:" Cognitive Traditions and Communities in Technological Change (2493 words)
Technological paradigms not only change because of self-willed "functional failures" (the mainly functional equivalent to Kuhn's anomalies) but also because of "presumptive" ones, something without analogy in scientific paradigms conception.
To put it shortly, during the reigning of a previous technological paradigm and its normal science development a new scientific theory may already be able to show the limits of it, that it would not work under different or more stringent conditions.
Technological communities, if they are composed of the participants of Constant's model, are first of all practical communities to produce some technological artifacts.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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