Module 1: Discussion
CHAPTER ONE
The Nature of Technology
Today’s technology leaves us both exhilarated and terrified. Recent technological developments
have presented us with such marvels as spacecraft leaving the solar system, instant access to
billions of internet Web pages, and diseases cured through gene therapy. At the same time,
however, the seemingly inexorable march of technology has produced global pollution,
overpopulation, and the threat of nuclear annihilation. On many occasions, technological change
has also produced social disruptions, as when automation destroys jobs in a particular industry or
a new weapon upsets the balance of power between nations. And when technologies fail, some
of them do so in a big way, as exemplified by the loss of the Challenger and Columbia space
shuttles, the massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, the catastrophic failure of the Fukushima
nuclear plant in Japan, and the disastrous breaching of the levees in New Orleans in the wake of
Hurricane Katrina.
Despite all the crises, disruptions, and disasters that have accompanied it, modern technology is
still viewed in a favorable light, according to public opinion surveys. Although significant
minorities of respondents express their disapproval of certain technologies like nuclear power
and genetically modified foods, the positive achievements of technology as a whole are seen to
substantially outweigh the negative ones.1 But this support of technology is based more on faith
than on understanding. When confronting technology, most of us are poorly informed spectators,
seemingly incapable of understanding an esoteric realm of lasers, microprocessors, gene splicing,
and nanomaterials.
This inability to understand technology and perceive its effects on our society and on ourselves is
one of the greatest, if most subtle, problems of an age that has been so heavily influenced by
technological change. But ignorance need not be a permanent condition. Although no one can
hope to comprehend the inner workings of even a small number of the most significant
technologies, it is still possible to come to a better understanding of the major causes and
consequences of technological change. All technologies, be they high-definition televisions or
reinforced concrete bridges, have some basic features in common. It will be the task of this
chapter to show what they are.
Defining Technology
Gaining an understanding of the meaning of words is often the beginning of knowledge. Before
plunging into a discussion of the nature of technology, it is necessary to provide a more precise
definition of what is meant when we use the term. The linguistic roots of the word “technology”
can be traced to the Indo-European stem tekhn-, which seems to have referred to woodworking.
It is the source of the Greek word tekne, which can be variously translated as “art,” “craft,” or
“skill.” It is also the root of the Latin word texere, “to weave,” which eventually took on the
larger meaning of fabrication or construction. By the early eighteenth century, the word had
come close to its present meaning when an English dictionary defined it as “a Description of
Arts, especially the Mechanical.” In 1831, Jacob Bigelow published Elements of Technology, the
first book in English with the word “technology” in its title. As he defined it, technology
consisted of “the principles, processes, and nomenclatures of the more conspicuous arts,
particularly those which involve applications of science.”2
Tools and Techniques
Technologies are developed and applied so that we can do things not otherwise possible, or so
that we can do them cheaper, faster, and more easily. The capacity of human beings to employ
technologies sets us apart from other creatures. To be sure, beavers build dams, otters crack open
shellfish with rocks, and chimpanzees use sticks to extract termites from their nests. But no other
animal comes close to humans in the ability to create tools and techniques—the first two
elements in our definition of technology—and no other creature is so dependent on them. The
development of technology is in large measure responsible for the survival and expansion of a
species that lacks many of the innate abilities of other animals. Left with only our innate physical
capabilities, we humans cannot match the speed of a cheetah, the strength of an elephant, or the
leaping ability of a kangaroo. We do not possess the eyesight of an eagle or the defensive
armament of a porcupine, and we are among the 25 percent of all species that are incapable of
flying. All in all, humankind is a physically puny bunch. But compensating for this physical
weakness is an intelligence that is the ultimate source of technology. Humans stand apart from
all other animals in their ability to gain and transmit knowledge, and to use this knowledge to
develop tools and techniques. Without this capacity to invent and use a great variety of
technologies, the human species would have never been able to establish itself on virtually every
part of the globe.
Reliance on technology is as old as humanity itself. Whatever evils have accompanied the use of
particular technologies, it is pointless to indict technology as being somehow “unnatural.” Our
past as well as our future as a species is inextricably linked to our capacity to shape our existence
through the invention and application of implements and techniques that allow us to transcend
our meager physical endowments. It is certainly true, as Jacob Bronowski observed, that “to
quarrel with technology is to quarrel with the nature of man—just as if we were to quarrel with
his upright gait, his symbolic imagination, his faculty for speech, or his unusual sexual posture
and appetite.”3
Organizing Humanity
Tools and techniques have been of unquestioned importance in allowing the physical survival of
the human species. Still, they are not the whole story. It is necessary to add some elements to our
definition of technology that go beyond the usual identification of technology with pieces of
hardware and ways of manipulating them. The first of these is organization. This follows from
the fact that the development, production, and employment of particular technologies require a
group effort. Even a relatively simple technology, such as one centering on the use of
earthenware pots, requires a complex network of material suppliers, potters, toolmakers,
marketing agents, and consumers capable of making good use of the pots. Of course, one person
can learn all these skills adequately if not expertly, but the day is not long enough for him or her
to do them all on a scale that produces a reasonable degree of efficiency. In the case of a
complex technology like a computerized manufacturing system, there is no possibility of a single
individual developing even a tiny fraction of the requisite skills.
For a technology to be developed and used, the energies and skills of many individuals have to
be combined and coordinated through some organizational structure. Organization may be
likened to the software that controls and guides a computer; without an operating system and
application programs, a computer is a useless arrangement of capacitors, transistors, resistors,
and other bits of hardware. In similar fashion, an organizational structure allows the integration
of diffuse human and material inputs for the attainment of particular tasks. From this standpoint,
there is considerable merit in Lewis Mumford’s assertion that the first “machine” was not a
physical object, but the organizational structures that the Egyptian pharaohs employed to build
the pyramids.4
According to one perspective, the workers who labored to build the pyramids were components
of a kind of machine.
When technology is seen as a combination of devices, skills, and organizational structures, it
becomes natural to think of it as a system, the next element in our definition. For an individual
technology to operate effectively, more is required than the invention of a particular piece of
hardware; it has to be supported by other elements that are systematically interconnected. When
Thomas Edison began to work on electrical illumination, he realized that this technology would
require the development of such a system. The invention of a practical, long-lasting lightbulb
rested on the development of a serviceable filament and the use of an improved vacuum pump
that evacuated the interior of the bulb, thereby preventing the combustion of the filament. But by
itself, a lightbulb was useless. An effective electrical generator was needed to supply the current
that produced the incandescence of the filament. A network of electrical lines had to be strung up
between the generator and individual homes, shops, and factories. And metering devices were
necessary so that users could be accurately billed for the electricity they used. Edison and his
associates worked out all of these problems, and in so doing brought large-scale electrical
illumination to the world.5
The development of all the elements of a technological system can be an uneven process, for
technological advance often entails the resolution of tensions that are generated when one part of
the technological system changes. This process is exemplified by the development of the modern
airplane. Early biplanes with their drag-inducing wires and struts could not make effective use of
more powerful engines. The availability of these engines became a strong inducement to the
design of aerodynamically cleaner aircraft. The faster aircraft that resulted from the marriage of
streamlined airframes and powerful engines produced a new problem: dangerously high landing
speeds. This, in turn, stimulated the invention of wing flaps and slots. By the 1940s, it had
become apparent that improved airframes could achieve still higher speeds if provided with more
powerful engines; this possibility gave a strong stimulus to the development of the turbojet.6
For an example of the interplay of devices, skills, and organizational patterns, we can take note
of Lewis Mumford’s analysis of the technology of handwriting.7 Two hundred years ago, the
standard writing instrument was a goose-quill pen. Based on an organic product and sharpened
by the user, it represented the handicraft technologies typical of its time. Cheap and crude, it
called for a fair degree of skill if it was to be used effectively. In contrast, the steel-nib pen of the
nineteenth century was a typical artifact of the industrial age, the product of a complex
manufacturing process. Less adaptable than the quill, it was mass-produced in many different
forms in order to meet specialized needs. Although Mumford’s ideas were formulated before the
invention of the ballpoint pen in the 1940s, his analysis fits this implement perfectly. Made from
a variety of artificial materials and manufactured to close tolerances, the ballpoint pen could only
be produced through sophisticated industrial processes. It is completely divorced from the
organic world and requires very little skill from its user. Indeed, the technological artistry
embodied in the pen itself stands in sharp contrast to the poor quality of the writing that so often
comes from the hand that wields it.
A technological system does not emerge all at once with every one of its components neatly
fitting together. In addition to changes in tools, techniques, and organizational structures, many
social, psychological, economic, and political adjustments may be required for the support of a
technological system. Technological change is not always a smooth process, and many of the
necessary changes may entail considerable pain and disruption. Seeing technology as a system
should help us to understand that technological change is closely connected with a variety of
associated changes, and that the creation of a technological system may be fraught with tension
and discomfort.
Much of what has just been said can be incorporated into a schematic definition of technology: a
system created by humans that uses knowledge and organization to produce objects and
techniques for the attainment of specific goals.
Useful as it may be, this definition of technology is incomplete and possibly misleading in one
important respect. The last part of the definition implies that technological change comes about
as a response to existing needs: its purpose is “the attainment of specific goals.” In the first place,
one could legitimately ask whose goals are to be attained. This is an important issue, but it is best
left for the next chapter. For now, we should note that although it is a human creation,
technology does not always respond to existing needs; a new technology may in fact create its
own needs. The development of technology on occasion exemplifies a phenomenon that has been
dubbed “the law of the hammer”: give a six-year-old a hammer, and to the child everything starts
looking like a nail.
The history of technology is replete with examples of inventions looking for problems to solve.
One example that illustrates this point is found in almost every medicine chest: a bottle of
aspirin. One of the most common uses of aspirin is to suppress fevers that accompany various
illnesses. But medical research (as well as some ancient practices) has demonstrated that running
a fever is a therapeutic process that aids in a patient’s recovery; it is the body’s way of naturally
combating infection. Yet since the introduction of aspirin in the early 1900s fever has been seen
as a problem requiring intervention. As one medical researcher has noted, “It’s no surprise that
society’s deep worries about fever closely followed the synthesis of aspirin, the first drug that
could safely reduce it.”8 In short, a new technology created its own need.
It is also important to note that the goals achieved through the use of a technology do not have to
be “practical” ones. Some technologies have been developed so that we can grow more food or
construct more comfortable buildings, but others have been developed simply for the challenge
and enjoyment of solving technological problems, a proclivity that Robert Post has described as
“technological enthusiasm.”9 The prodigious efforts that went into the Daedalus project, a
successful attempt to build a human-powered aircraft capable of flying 40 miles across the open
sea, were certainly not motivated by an effort to produce a new form of transportation. A major
reason for creating the aircraft was that its construction posed an intriguing technological
challenge to those who designed, built, and flew it.
Flight seems to be a particularly attractive object for this kind of spirit. Immensely expensive
technological endeavors such as the supersonic Concorde airliner and manned space exploration
programs are hard to justify on practical grounds, although their supporters have made valiant
efforts to do so. Their primary purpose seems to be the elevation of national prestige by
demonstrating a nation’s collective ability to solve daunting technological problems. At the same
time, many other technologies have a dual nature; they serve a practical purpose, but they are not
valued only for this reason. An outstanding example is the automobile. It would be hard to justify
the enormous resources employed for the building and operation of cars if transportation were
the only goal. For many people (the author included), cars are objects of inherent fascination.
Technological features like variable valve timing and active suspension systems have little to do
with utilitarian transportation. The appeal is at least as much in the sophisticated technologies
themselves as in the purposes that they serve.
Technological Advance and the Image of Progress
The development of technology is an inherently dynamic and cumulative process. It is dynamic
because a technology is never perfect; there is always room for improvement. As Henry Ford
said of his firm, “If we have a tradition it is this: Everything can always be done faster and
better.”10 It is cumulative, for one advance paves the way for another. The lessons learned in
working with an existing technology very often provide materials, tools, and, most importantly, a
knowledge base for the next stage of development.
Sometimes we are inclined to look to technology for our salvation, as personified in this tongue-
in-cheek rendition of a sanctified Steve Jobs.
The dynamic and cumulative nature of technological change sets it apart from many other human
endeavors. Ignoring for the moment the social consequences of technology, the process of
technological change is usually one of continuous improvement in the internal workings of a
particular technology: as they evolve, engines develop more power and are more efficient,
integrated electronic circuits pack more components on a single chip, aircraft fly higher and
faster.
The process of technological advance can be graphically portrayed according to the following
diagram, in which the horizontal axis represents time and the vertical axis represents just about
any aspect of technological advance: the speed of commercial airliners, the production of
synthetic materials, or the number of articles in engineering journals. Although there are
inevitable fits and starts over time, the general trend can be depicted as a sigmoid, or S-shaped
curve (see figure below).
Note that at first the curve rises rather slowly, inclines steeply in the middle, and then begins to
slow down. That is, after an initial period of slow growth, the rate of advance accelerates,
reaches a maximum, and then begins to proceed at a slower pace but never completely levels off.
Although the rate of increase is smaller as the curve moves toward the right, this rate is applied
to an increasingly larger base, so the actual addition is still substantial.
Not all human endeavors can be fitted to this sort of curve. While technology tends to be
dynamic and cumulative, the same cannot always be said of other manifestations of human
creativity. Although there is ample room for debate, a good case can be made that succeeding
generations of writers, composers, and painters have not produced works superior to the ones
created by Shakespeare, Beethoven, and Vermeer. And while we continue to take great pleasure
in the artistic creations of eras long past, few of us would be satisfied with the technologies that
were prevalent in those times. We also see few indications that people are more humane than
they were centuries ago. The present era certainly provides a multitude of horrifying examples of
human cruelty, many of them augmented by enlisting technology in the service of slaughter and
destruction.
Built with slave labor, the V-2 rocket exemplified the technological progress of Nazi Germany.
Still, when judged solely according to internal criteria, technology is one of the best examples of
humankind’s largely unrealized dream of continual progress. Technological progress, however,
is not the same thing as progress in general. The fact that a society is able to develop and make
use of advanced technologies does not guarantee that it will be equally advanced in other areas.11
Nazi Germany produced many technological triumphs, such as the all-conquering Mercedes and
Auto Union grand prix racing cars of the late 1930s and the V-2 rocket used during World War
II, but in its ideology and treatment of people it can only be described as barbaric. Conversely,
many technologically primitive peoples have exhibited a high level of sophistication in their
artistic creations, religious beliefs, and social relationships. The term “progress” can be used with
some precision when applied to the development of technology per se, although even here
problems can crop up because different standards of evaluation may lead to conflicting
conclusions. Is it really “progress” when a new medical technology maintains an individual’s
life, but does so only at enormous expense while preserving nothing but the maintenance of
organic functions? Does maintaining a “life” of this sort justify expenditures that otherwise
might be used for expanded prenatal care or other preventative measures? Given all of the value
judgments, ambiguities, and complexities surrounding the word “progress,” its use is avoided
here unless its meaning is clearly defined.
Technology as a Metaphor
Despite these qualifications, it is evident that beginning in the late eighteenth century and
continuing today, technology’s stunning advances have fueled a belief in generalized human
progress. In this way, technology has operated as a metaphor—the transference of an idea from
one area to another. Technology has provided many other metaphors that have affected our way
of looking at ourselves and the world, as when human thought is made analogous to the
operation of a digital computer.
A further example of the power of a technology to shape our way of thinking comes from the late
eighteenth century. At that time, the designers of windmills and steam engines discovered the
important principle of feedback, which the great twentieth-century mathematician Norbert
Wiener defined as “a method of controlling a system by reinserting in it the results of its past
performance.”12 When a steam engine begins to rotate too rapidly, a feedback device such as a
flyball governor closes the valve that admits the steam, thereby bringing the engine back into its
proper operating range. When it slows down, the reverse happens, and the governor opens the
valve to admit more steam.
During the late eighteenth century, the feedback principle offered a suggestive metaphor for the
workings of the economic system: instead of being guided by a centralized authority, an
economy might best be organized through the operation of a self-regulating market, with the
actions of independent buyers and sellers providing the feedback. Thus, when buyers wanted a
particular commodity, its price would be high, motivating sellers to produce more of it. If the
price were low, less would be produced. In similar fashion, an increase in production would
cause the price of a commodity to fall, so more of it would be purchased, while a drop in
production would cause the price to rise, leading to a reduction of purchases. In this way, the
actions of buyers and sellers in the market provide a feedback mechanism through which supply
and demand are supposedly brought into equilibrium. It is probably no coincidence that the
Scottish economist Adam Smith developed this basic concept at the same time that the steam
engine was being put into service.13 Today, the widespread use of the feedback principle makes
its apparent applicability to the economic system even more appealing, even though the real-
world economy is hardly a neat closed system like a steam engine. Laws and regulations, as well
as a host of other extraneous elements, may strongly affect individual feedback loops, thereby
preventing a complex economy from operating solely on the basis of supply-and-demand signals.
Technological development has supplied a useful metaphor in the feedback principle, but like all
metaphors it cannot be taken as a literal depiction of reality.
A steam engine with a flyball governor. Changes in the rotational speed of the vertical shaft at
the top of the engine causes the two balls to move up or down, thereby controlling the linkage
that opens and closes the throttle.
Technology and Rationality
The development of technology has stimulated a belief that progress is a natural part of human
life. At the same time, the progressive development of technology has itself been the product of a
distinctive set of cultural values and mental processes that are characterized by a rational
approach to the world and how it is to be controlled. Technological development is more than the
random accumulation of tools, techniques, and organizational forms. Underlying the process is a
set of attitudes and orientations that are collectively described as “rational.”
What makes a technologically progressive society different from others is that its methods of
problem solving are oriented toward an objective scrutiny of the problem at hand, coupled with a
systematic, empirically based examination of possible solutions and a logical selection of the
most appropriate ones. Beyond this approach to the solution of problems lies another cultural
attribute: the belief that solutions are possible and that constant changes are necessary in order to
realize them. A society imbued with a rational ethos is dynamic and essentially optimistic, and it
exhibits the confidence necessary to alter existing ways of doing things in order to gain particular
benefits.
These abstract concepts may be illustrated through a simple example. All societies are faced with
the problem of coping with the capriciousness of the weather. A great deal of human suffering
has been the result of the vagaries of rainfall, and history provides many examples of the tragic
consequences of drought. A number of responses are possible when people are confronted with
this problem. The simplest is to succumb to despair, and perhaps try to find meaning in it by
attributing the drought to fate or God’s will. A more active approach might be to offer prayers,
perform a special ceremony, or sacrifice a member of the community. These latter activities are
not likely to meet with success. There is no logical or empirically verifiable connection between
them and the circumstances that produced the drought, a fact that could be demonstrated by a
systematic inquiry into the long-term connection between prayers, ceremonies, or human
sacrifices and the incidence of rainfall.
Attitudes and behaviors of this sort stand in sharp contrast with rational ones. Through the use of
logic and empirical observation it is possible to develop ways of dealing with problems like
drought that are both more effective and more closely connected to the way the world actually
works. A systematic and empirical observation of weather patterns might allow the prediction of
a drought so that necessary steps can be taken to alter farming practices and conserve water.
Other solutions could be the development of drought-resistant crops, improved methods of
conserving water, and the distillation of seawater. It might also be possible to artificially
stimulate rainfall through cloud seeding. In short, a rational approach to problem solving is
continuously concerned with identifying and developing appropriate means for achieving
particular ends.
The Limits of Rationality
These remarks are not meant to convey the ethnocentric belief that modern Western culture is
superior to all others. The intention here is not to ridicule the beliefs and practices of people and
societies that use nonrational approaches to problem solving. There is no reason to believe that
rationality has been and always will be the special attribute of a particular group of people.
Moreover, modern societies often manifest behaviors and patterns of thought that are anything
but rational, as when large numbers of people continue to find value in astrology, numerology,
and the predictions of supposed psychics.
Science cannot prevent natural disasters, such as tornados, but it can and has helped develop
better ways of predicting when they will occur to reduce injuries and fatalities.
It is also important to recognize that rational ways of thinking do not confer moral superiority.
To the contrary, the rigorous development and use of rational procedures can be accompanied by
major moral and ethical transgressions. The rational method of problem solving, with its
overarching concern for devising appropriate means for attaining particular ends, makes no
distinction concerning the ends being pursued. There is nothing in the rational approach to the
world that prevents the use of logically and empirically derived means in the service of goals that
are neither rational nor ethically justifiable. We can take note of the words of Captain Ahab, the
main figure in Herman Melville’s novel Moby Dick: “All my means are sane, my motive and
subject mad.” Nazi Germany provides many ghastly historical examples of human destruction
ensuing from rational thinking and its resultant technologies. As Albert Speer, Hitler’s Minister
of Armaments, ruefully noted, “The criminal events of these years were not only an outgrowth of
Hitler’s personality. The extent of the crimes was also due to the fact that Hitler was the first to
be able to employ the implements of technology to multiply crime.”14
Even when rationality is not used for manifestly immoral purposes, it can still leave a dubious
spiritual legacy. The very strength of rationality and the scientific and technological
accomplishments that flow from it lie in their matter-of-fact approach to the world. A rational
approach to things is often accompanied by a reluctance to admit there are any forces incapable
of withstanding logical and empirical scrutiny. As the great German sociologist Max Weber put
it, the world defined by rational thought processes had become “disenchanted,” for it was bereft
of the gods, genies, and spiritual forces that people not imbued with the spirit of rationality used
to explain their world.15 But “disenchantment” is a two-edged sword, as the everyday meaning of
the word makes clear. To be disenchanted is to lose the sense of awe, commitment, and loyalty
that is a necessary part of a meaningful existence. Weber’s melancholy analysis of a world that
has lost its enchantment is summarized by the French sociologist Julian Freund:16
With the progress of science and technology, man has stopped believing in magic powers, in
spirits and demons; he has lost his sense of prophecy and, above all, his sense of the sacred.
Reality has become dreary, flat and utilitarian, leaving a great void in the souls of men which
they seek to fill by furious activity and through various devices and substitutes.
Similar misgivings were voiced by the eighteenth-century political philosopher Edmund Burke.
Burke’s primary concern was the destruction of traditional authority by modern mass
movements, as exemplified by the French Revolution. Burke attributed much of the demonic
energy of that movement to the spread of rational modes of thought that left no room for the
traditional attitudes, values, and political structures that had long sustained European civilization.
Burke’s comment on the downfall of the queen of France, Marie Antoinette, thus contains a
sharp indictment of the bearers of rational values who, in his estimation, were leading Europe to
its doom:17
Little did I dream that I should have lived to see such disasters fallen upon her in a nation of
gallant men, in a nation of men of honor and of cavaliers. I thought ten thousand swords must
have leaped from their scabbards to avenge even a look that threatened her with insult. But the
age of chivalry is gone. That of sophisters, economists, and calculators, has succeeded; and the
glory of Europe is extinguished forever.
Rationality also implies objectivity; coolness and detachment are part of the rational approach to
understanding and changing the world. Guided by a rational outlook, scientific inquiry and
technological application are usually based on the abstraction or isolation of the part of the
natural world that is being studied or manipulated. This is not always a good thing, for it can
produce a sharp separation between the individual and the rest of the world. The scientist or
technologist stands apart from the system that is being studied and manipulated, resulting in a
kind of tunnel vision that may ignore the larger consequences of gaining and applying
knowledge.18 For example, in discovering a genetic marker for a serious disease, a researcher
might not consider potential abuses of that discovery, such as insurance companies refusing
coverage of people with that marker.
It also may be argued that a logical, detached, and dispassionate approach to the world is
suffused with a “masculine” approach to understanding and interacting with the world. Some
technologies have largely been a male domain, but throughout history women have also made
significant contributions to technological advance.19 The complex relationship of gender and
technology is illustrated by the history of the technological artifact most strongly associated with
the present era, the digital computer. Its development has generally been viewed as the product
of hyperrational male engineers, mathematicians, scientists, and technicians. In reality, many of
the programmers of first-generation computers were women whose accomplishments have often
been passed over in standard histories.20 More recently, the development of computer technology
has depended on thought processes that are relentlessly rational, objective, and logical, but at the
same time has required an intuitive, interactive, and generally less structured approach.21 This is
not to say that either style is the exclusive province of men or women, only that technological
advance often requires both approaches. Equally important, although these modes of thinking
may be described in gender terms, they need not reflect the cognitive approaches of individual
men and women.
Technological Determinism
Nothing worthwhile in life comes without some costs attached. So it is with technology; while it
has expanded human power and made our lives materially richer, the advance of technology has
created many problems—environmental degradation, alienation, and the threat of nuclear
annihilation, to name only the most obvious ones. And, most bothersome of all, there looms the
possibility that technology is out of control. If this is so, what began more than a million years
ago as a human creation has taken on a life of its own, with technology advancing according to
its own inner dynamic, unrestrained by social arrangements, systems of governance, culture, and
thought.22 The belief that technology acts as an independent force in our life, unaffected by
social forces, is known as “technological determinism,” and if it is true, we have become the
servant of technology instead of its master.
There can be little question that technology exerts a great influence on social, political, and
economic relationships. Everything from antibiotics to zippers has affected our lives to some
degree; many of these influences will be explored in subsequent portions of this book. But that is
not the end of the story. As will be explored at greater length in Chapter 3, students of
technology have given extensive consideration to the opposite possibility, that instead of
operating as an independent force, technology is shaped by social arrangements. According to
social constructivists (adherents of the Social Construction of Technology approach), the
emergence of particular technologies, choices between competing technologies, and the way
these technologies are actually used owe a great deal to socially grounded forces such as political
power, social class, gender, and organizational dynamics.
Asserting the supremacy of either technological determinism or social constructivism is not a
very useful activity. Such straightforward cause-and-effect relationships can be found in some
realms—Newtonian physics, for example—but technological and social change is better
understood in terms of probabilities, reciprocal interactions, and feedback loops. Even William
F. Ogburn, a sociologist who is often characterized as a technological determinist, on occasion
took a more nuanced view of the subject: “The more that one studies the relationships between
mechanical and social invention, the more interrelated they seem…. The whole interconnected
mass [i.e., social institutions, customs, technology, and science] is in motion. When each part is
in motion and banging up against some other part, the question of origins seems artificial and
unrealistic. If one pushes the question to the extreme, origins are lost in a maze of causative
factors.”23
The wondrously complicated interactions of technology and society often result in unimagined
consequences when new technologies emerge. To take one example, when the first digital
computers appeared in the mid-1940s, they elicited modest expectations about their future
applications. Today, the world as we know it is almost unimaginable without computers, as
everything from air travel to the mapping of genomes is totally dependent on the storage,
retrieval, and manipulation of information performed by computers. Accordingly, the history of
the computer would seem to lend credence to technological determinism. Nobody saw it coming
in the 1940s, but within a few decades the computer had become a universal and essential part of
contemporary life.
This is the story from a technological determinist standpoint, but social constructivists would
challenge it by noting that the technical development of the computer in the 1950s and 1960s
was heavily supported by military expenditures, just as one of today’s major computer
applications, the internet, was initially a creation of the U.S. Department of Defense. Someone
taking a social constructivist approach might also point out that the expansion of the market for
computers was also powerfully stimulated by commercial enterprises like banks and insurance
companies, and that this huge market supported the research and development that rapidly
advanced computer technology.
A similar story could be repeated for most successful technologies. New technologies bring
changes to many aspects of society, while at the same time social forces do much to stimulate
and shape these technologies. To try to assign primacy to one or the other is to ignore a crucial
feature of technological and social change. Both are dynamic processes characterized by the
reciprocal interaction of a host of factors, some of them narrowly technical in nature, others not.
No reasonable person could deny that technology has been a major force in making the world we
live in, but it is important to always keep in mind that technology has not operated as an agent
independent of the society in which it is imbedded.
Social constructivism therefore offers the possibility for more human agency than technological
determinism, but it is not likely that the ability to influence the course of technological change
will be evenly distributed among the population as a whole. To the contrary, social constructivist
analyses have often shown how differences in power and access to resources have shaped
technological change. Particular technologies may be devised, selected, and disseminated
because they serve the interests of a particular group, possibly in opposition to the interests of
other groups. Technology confers power, but this power is not wielded over only the nonhuman
universe. As C. S. Lewis has reminded us, “Man’s power over nature is really the power of some
men over others with nature as their instrument.”24
Living in a Technological Society
The development and application of technologies that are suited to our needs requires the
informed participation of a wide range of people. Unfortunately, the very nature of modern
technology places severe limits on popular understanding. The sophistication and complexity of
contemporary technologies preclude direct involvement by all but those immediately concerned
with them. The rest of us are passive consumers, content to reap the benefits of rationally derived
knowledge but woefully ignorant of it. This creates the fundamental paradox of modern society:
technology has generated massive powers available to human society, while as individuals we
exert very little of that power. We have access to a wide range of powerful technologies, yet our
inability to understand them often leaves us with feelings of impotence and frustration, as anyone
who has experienced a computer crash will attest.
As has been noted, the application of rationality for the solution of human problems is both the
consequence and the cause of optimism and a willingness to accept constant change. Yet one
cannot help but wonder if these characteristics can be sustained in an environment that sharply
limits participation and inculcates widespread feelings of having little or no power over the
process of technological change.
Strange notions can emerge when feelings of powerlessness are coupled with an extravagant
faith in technology. The consequences of this combination are sometimes exhibited by fervent
believers in alien spacecraft or UFOs (unidentified flying objects). Although convincing
evidence of UFOs is lacking, a belief in their existence does not necessarily make one a crackpot.
In some cases, however, a strident belief in the existence of UFOs takes on the characteristics of
membership in a religious cult where the deities are superior beings who have produced an
advanced technology. Alien spaceships represent a level of technical sophistication not attained
on Earth, and some UFO enthusiasts entertain the hope that the aliens that created them will take
over this planet and solve its problems. Faith in a higher technology may be combined with a
mistrust of the “establishment,” as a fair number of UFO adherents claim that their government
is engaged in a massive conspiracy to prevent the general public from being aware of the
existence of UFOs. There is no denying that on occasion governments lie to their citizens, but a
cover-up of the required magnitude would be impossible for even the most well-organized
government to pull off. Still, conspiracy theories strike a resonant chord with people who feel
that they have been excluded from decision making, both political and technological. A quasi-
religious belief in UFOs may therefore combine an excessive confidence in technology in
general with a distrust of the people and organizations that control it in actual practice.
Distrust flourishes when people have no ability to participate in decisions that shape their lives,
and the inability to affect the course of technological change can produce a mixture of naive
hope and paranoid reaction. A realistic sense of control, including a sense of having some control
over technology, is essential for an individual’s mental health. No less important, widespread
participation in the shaping of technology is essential for democracy. Technology’s benefits
cannot be separated from its costs, and thus it becomes necessary to determine if the former
justify the latter. If a society is truly democratic, such decisions will be made with as much
citizen participation as possible. Moreover, the benefits and costs of technology are not shared
equally, and once again the apportioning of costs and benefits should be done in as participatory
a manner as possible. We will return to these themes in Chapter 17, but first, we will take a
closer look at how technology can affect people and groups in different ways.
QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION
1. In your opinion, which recent technology has produced the greatest benefit? Which has produced the most harm? Are there any harmful elements to the beneficial technology,
and has anything good come from the harmful one?
2. You have probably heard the old saying that “necessity is the mother of invention.” Are new technologies usually a response to an existing need of some sort? Can you think of
any technologies that created a need before most people were aware of it?
3. Are technologies “gendered”? Are some technologies identified with women and others with men? On what bases do we make these distinctions? Will this situation necessarily
continue in the years to come?
4. Can you think of any technologies that were developed simply because of the technical challenges involved? How can these “impractical” technologies be justified?
5. How do you feel when a technological device upon which you depend malfunctions? What do these feelings tell you about your attitude toward technology in general?
6. It is sometimes asserted that the development and use of birth control pills were responsible for the sexual revolution that began in the 1960s. Is there a simple cause-and-
effect relationship of the two? Have there been any other forces that contributed to
changing sexual mores?
Volti, R. (20170109). Society and Technological Change, 8th Edition [VitalSource Bookshelf
version]. Retrieved from https://bookshelf.vitalsource.com/books/9781319129729