On the poietic character of technology

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 06-2016
Journal Humana.Mente : Journal of Philosophical Studies
Volume | Issue number 9 | 30
Pages (from-to) 147-174
Organisations
  • Interfacultary Research - Institute for Logic, Language and Computation (ILLC)
Abstract
Large part of contemporary science is in fact technoscience, in the sense that it crucially depends on several technologies for the generation, collection, and analysis of data. This prompts a re-examination of the relations between science and technologies. In this essay, I advance the view that we’d better move beyond the ‘subordination view’ and the ‘instrumental’ view. The first aims to establish the primacy of science over technology (or viceversa), and the second uses technology instrumentally to support a realist position about theoretical entities. I suggest that we should instead concentrate on how science and technology interact. This will reveal that technology has a poietic character, namely it actively partakes in the production of knowledge. But this poietic character can only be understood within the cognitive activity of scientific communities. Current research in molecular epidemiology, notably the projects funded within the ‘European exposome initiative’, serves as a motivation for such discussion and as an illustration of the claims made.
Document type Article
Note In special issue: In Silico Modeling: the Human Factor.
Language English
Published at http://www.humanamente.eu/index.php/HM/article/view/64
Downloads
64-Article Text-101-1-10-20180526 (Final published version)
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