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Wikipedia

Technology

Technology is the application of conceptual knowledge for achieving practical goals, especially in a reproducible way.[1] The word technology can also mean the products resulting from such efforts,[2][3] including both tangible tools such as utensils or machines, and intangible ones such as software. Technology plays a critical role in science, engineering, and everyday life.

A steam turbine with the case opened, an example of energy technology

Technological advancements have led to significant changes in society. The earliest known technology is the stone tool, used during prehistoric times, followed by the control of fire, which contributed to the growth of the human brain and the development of language during the Ice Age. The invention of the wheel in the Bronze Age allowed greater travel and the creation of more complex machines. More recent technological inventions, including the printing press, telephone, and the Internet, have lowered barriers to communication and ushered in the knowledge economy.

While technology contributes to economic development and improves human prosperity, it can also have negative impacts like pollution and resource depletion, and can cause social harms like technological unemployment resulting from automation. As a result, there are ongoing philosophical and political debates about the role and use of technology, the ethics of technology, and ways to mitigate its downsides.

Etymology

Technology is a term dating back to the early 17th century that meant 'systematic treatment' (from Greek Τεχνολογία, from the Greek: τέχνη, romanizedtékhnē, lit.'craft, art' and -λογία, 'study, knowledge').[4][5] It is predated in use by the Ancient Greek word tékhnē, used to mean 'knowledge of how to make things', which encompassed activities like architecture.[6]

Starting in the 19th century, continental Europeans started using the terms Technik (German) or technique (French) to refer to a 'way of doing', which included all technical arts, such as dancing, navigation, or printing, whether or not they required tools or instruments.[7] At the time, Technologie (German and French) referred either to the academic discipline studying the "methods of arts and crafts", or to the political discipline "intended to legislate on the functions of the arts and crafts."[8] Since the distinction between Technik and Technologie is absent in English, both were translated as technology. The term was previously uncommon in English and mostly referred to the academic discipline, as in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[9]

In the 20th century, as a result of scientific progress and the Second Industrial Revolution, technology stopped being considered a distinct academic discipline and took on its current-day meaning: the systemic use of knowledge to practical ends.[10]

History

Prehistoric

 
A person holding a hand axe

Tools were initially developed by hominids through observation and trial and error.[11] Around 2 Mya (million years ago), they learned to make the first stone tools by hammering flakes off a pebble, forming a sharp hand axe.[12] This practice was refined 75 kya (thousand years ago) into pressure flaking, enabling much finer work.[13]

The discovery of fire was described by Charles Darwin as "possibly the greatest ever made by man".[14] Archaeological, dietary, and social evidence point to "continuous [human] fire-use" at least 1.5 Mya.[15] Fire, fueled with wood and charcoal, allowed early humans to cook their food to increase its digestibility, improving its nutrient value and broadening the number of foods that could be eaten.[16] The cooking hypothesis proposes that the ability to cook promoted an increase in hominid brain size, though some researchers find the evidence inconclusive.[17] Archaeological evidence of hearths was dated to 790 kya; researchers believe this is likely to have intensified human socialization and may have contributed to the emergence of language.[18][19]

Other technological advances made during the Paleolithic era include clothing and shelter.[20] No consensus exists on the approximate time of adoption of either technology, but archaeologists have found archaeological evidence of clothing 90-120 kya[21] and shelter 450 kya.[20] As the Paleolithic era progressed, dwellings became more sophisticated and more elaborate; as early as 380 kya, humans were constructing temporary wood huts.[22][23] Clothing, adapted from the fur and hides of hunted animals, helped humanity expand into colder regions; humans began to migrate out of Africa around 200 kya, initially moving to Eurasia.[24][25][26]

Neolithic

 
An array of Neolithic artifacts, including bracelets, axe heads, chisels, and polishing tools

The Neolithic Revolution (or First Agricultural Revolution) brought about an acceleration of technological innovation, and a consequent increase in social complexity.[27] The invention of the polished stone axe was a major advance that allowed large-scale forest clearance and farming.[28] This use of polished stone axes increased greatly in the Neolithic but was originally used in the preceding Mesolithic in some areas such as Ireland.[29] Agriculture fed larger populations, and the transition to sedentism allowed for the simultaneous raising of more children, as infants no longer needed to be carried around by nomads. Additionally, children could contribute labor to the raising of crops more readily than they could participate in hunter-gatherer activities.[30][31]

With this increase in population and availability of labor came an increase in labor specialization.[32] What triggered the progression from early Neolithic villages to the first cities, such as Uruk, and the first civilizations, such as Sumer, is not specifically known; however, the emergence of increasingly hierarchical social structures and specialized labor, of trade and war amongst adjacent cultures, and the need for collective action to overcome environmental challenges such as irrigation, are all thought to have played a role.[33]

The invention of writing led to the spread of cultural knowledge and became the basis for history, libraries, schools, and scientific research.[34]

Continuing improvements led to the furnace and bellows and provided, for the first time, the ability to smelt and forge gold, copper, silver, and lead – native metals found in relatively pure form in nature.[35] The advantages of copper tools over stone, bone and wooden tools were quickly apparent to early humans, and native copper was probably used from near the beginning of Neolithic times (about 10 ka).[36] Native copper does not naturally occur in large amounts, but copper ores are quite common and some of them produce metal easily when burned in wood or charcoal fires. Eventually, the working of metals led to the discovery of alloys such as bronze and brass (about 4,000 BCE). The first use of iron alloys such as steel dates to around 1,800 BCE.[37][38]

Ancient

 
The wheel was invented c. 4,000 BCE.

After harnessing fire, humans discovered other forms of energy. The earliest known use of wind power is the sailing ship; the earliest record of a ship under sail is that of a Nile boat dating to around 7,000 BCE.[39] From prehistoric times, Egyptians likely used the power of the annual flooding of the Nile to irrigate their lands, gradually learning to regulate much of it through purposely built irrigation channels and "catch" basins.[40] The ancient Sumerians in Mesopotamia used a complex system of canals and levees to divert water from the Tigris and Euphrates rivers for irrigation.[41]

Archaeologists estimate that the wheel was invented independently and concurrently in Mesopotamia (in present-day Iraq), the Northern Caucasus (Maykop culture), and Central Europe.[42] Time estimates range from 5,500 to 3,000 BCE with most experts putting it closer to 4,000 BCE.[43] The oldest artifacts with drawings depicting wheeled carts date from about 3,500 BCE.[44] More recently, the oldest-known wooden wheel in the world was found in the Ljubljana Marsh of Slovenia.[45]

The invention of the wheel revolutionized trade and war. It did not take long to discover that wheeled wagons could be used to carry heavy loads. The ancient Sumerians used a potter's wheel and may have invented it.[46] A stone pottery wheel found in the city-state of Ur dates to around 3,429 BCE,[47] and even older fragments of wheel-thrown pottery have been found in the same area.[47] Fast (rotary) potters' wheels enabled early mass production of pottery, but it was the use of the wheel as a transformer of energy (through water wheels, windmills, and even treadmills) that revolutionized the application of nonhuman power sources. The first two-wheeled carts were derived from travois[48] and were first used in Mesopotamia and Iran in around 3,000 BCE.[48]

The oldest known constructed roadways are the stone-paved streets of the city-state of Ur, dating to c. 4,000 BCE,[49] and timber roads leading through the swamps of Glastonbury, England, dating to around the same period.[49] The first long-distance road, which came into use around 3,500 BCE,[49] spanned 2,400 km from the Persian Gulf to the Mediterranean Sea,[49] but was not paved and was only partially maintained.[49] In around 2,000 BCE, the Minoans on the Greek island of Crete built a 50 km road leading from the palace of Gortyn on the south side of the island, through the mountains, to the palace of Knossos on the north side of the island.[49] Unlike the earlier road, the Minoan road was completely paved.[49]

 
Photograph of the Pont du Gard in France, one of the most famous ancient Roman aqueducts[50]

Ancient Minoan private homes had running water.[51] A bathtub virtually identical to modern ones was unearthed at the Palace of Knossos.[51][52] Several Minoan private homes also had toilets, which could be flushed by pouring water down the drain.[51] The ancient Romans had many public flush toilets,[52] which emptied into an extensive sewage system.[52] The primary sewer in Rome was the Cloaca Maxima;[52] construction began on it in the sixth century BCE and it is still in use today.[52]

The ancient Romans also had a complex system of aqueducts,[50] which were used to transport water across long distances.[50] The first Roman aqueduct was built in 312 BCE.[50] The eleventh and final ancient Roman aqueduct was built in 226 CE.[50] Put together, the Roman aqueducts extended over 450 km,[50] but less than 70 km of this was above ground and supported by arches.[50]

Pre-modern

Innovations continued through the Middle Ages with the introduction of silk production (in Asia and later Europe), the horse collar, and horseshoes. Simple machines (such as the lever, the screw, and the pulley) were combined into more complicated tools, such as the wheelbarrow, windmills, and clocks.[53] A system of universities developed and spread scientific ideas and practices, including Oxford and Cambridge.[54]

The Renaissance era produced many innovations, including the introduction of the movable type printing press to Europe, which facilitated the communication of knowledge. Technology became increasingly influenced by science, beginning a cycle of mutual advancement.[55]

Modern

 
The automobile revolutionized personal transportation.

Starting in the United Kingdom in the 18th century, the discovery of steam power set off the Industrial Revolution, which saw wide-ranging technological discoveries, particularly in the areas of agriculture, manufacturing, mining, metallurgy, and transport, and the widespread application of the factory system.[56] This was followed a century later by the Second Industrial Revolution which led to rapid scientific discovery, standardization, and mass production. New technologies were developed, including sewage systems, electricity, light bulbs, electric motors, railroads, automobiles, and airplanes. These technological advances led to significant developments in medicine, chemistry, physics, and engineering.[57] They were accompanied by consequential social change, with the introduction of skyscrapers accompanied by rapid urbanization.[58] Communication improved with the invention of the telegraph, the telephone, the radio, and television.[59]

The 20th century brought a host of innovations. In physics, the discovery of nuclear fission in the Atomic Age led to both nuclear weapons and nuclear power. Computers were invented and later shifted from analog to digital in the Digital Revolution. Information technology, particularly optical fiber and optical amplifiers led to the birth of the Internet, which ushered in the Information Age. The Space Age began with the launch of Sputnik 1 in 1957, and later the launch of crewed missions to the moon in the 1960s. Organized efforts to search for extraterrestrial intelligence have used radio telescopes to detect signs of technology use, or technosignatures, given off by alien civilizations. In medicine, new technologies were developed for diagnosis (CT, PET, and MRI scanning), treatment (like the dialysis machine, defibrillator, pacemaker, and a wide array of new pharmaceutical drugs), and research (like interferon cloning and DNA microarrays).[60]

Complex manufacturing and construction techniques and organizations are needed to make and maintain more modern technologies, and entire industries have arisen to develop succeeding generations of increasingly more complex tools. Modern technology increasingly relies on training and education – their designers, builders, maintainers, and users often require sophisticated general and specific training.[61] Moreover, these technologies have become so complex that entire fields have developed to support them, including engineering, medicine, and computer science; and other fields have become more complex, such as construction, transportation, and architecture.

Impact

Technological change is the largest cause of long-term economic growth.[62][63] Throughout human history, energy production was the main constraint on economic development, and new technologies allowed humans to significantly increase the amount of available energy. First came fire, which made edible a wider variety of foods, and made it less physically demanding to digest them. Fire also enabled smelting, and the use of tin, copper, and iron tools, used for hunting or tradesmanship. Then came the agricultural revolution: humans no longer needed to hunt or gather to survive, and began to settle in towns and cities, forming more complex societies, with militaries and more organized forms of religion.[64]

Technologies have contributed to human welfare through increased prosperity, improved comfort and quality of life, and medical progress, but they can also disrupt existing social hierarchies, cause pollution, and harm individuals or groups.

Recent years have brought about a rise in social media's cultural prominence, with potential repercussions on democracy, and economic and social life. Early on, the internet was seen as a "liberation technology" that would democratize knowledge, improve access to education, and promote democracy. Modern research has turned to investigate the internet's downsides, including disinformation, polarization, hate speech, and propaganda.[65]

Since the 1970s, technology's impact on the environment has been criticized, leading to a surge in investment in solar, wind, and other forms of clean energy.

Social

Jobs

Since the invention of the wheel, technologies have helped increase humans' economic output. Past automation has both substituted and complemented labor; machines replaced humans at some lower-paying jobs (for example in agriculture), but this was compensated by the creation of new, higher-paying jobs.[66] Studies have found that computers did not create significant net technological unemployment.[67] Due to artificial intelligence being far more capable than computers, and still being in its infancy, it is not known whether it will follow the same trend; the question has been debated at length among economists and policymakers. A 2017 survey found no clear consensus among economists on whether AI would increase long-term unemployment.[68] According to the World Economic Forum's "The Future of Jobs Report 2020", AI is predicted to replace 85 million jobs worldwide, and create 97 million new jobs by 2025.[69][70] From 1990 to 2007, a study in the U.S by MIT economist Daron Acemoglu showed that an addition of one robot for every 1,000 workers decreased the employment-to-population ratio by 0.2%, or about 3.3 workers, and lowered wages by 0.42%.[71][72] Concerns about technology replacing human labor however are long-lasting. As US president Lyndon Johnson said in 1964, "Technology is creating both new opportunities and new obligations for us, opportunity for greater productivity and progress; obligation to be sure that no workingman, no family must pay an unjust price for progress." upon signing the National Commission on Technology, Automation, and Economic Progress bill.[73][74][75][76][77]

Security

With the growing reliance of technology, there have been security and privacy concerns along with it. Billions of people use different online payment methods, such as WeChat Pay, PayPal, Alipay, and much more to help transfer money. Although security measures are placed, some criminals are able to bypass them.[78] In March 2022, North Korea used Blender.io, a mixer which helped them to hide their cryptocurrency exchanges, to launder over $20.5 million in cryptocurrency, from Axie Infinity, and steal over $600 million worth of cryptocurrency from the game's owner. Because of this, the U.S. Treasury Department sanctioned Blender.io, which marked the first time it has taken action against a mixer, to try and crack down on North Korean hackers.[79][80] The privacy of cryptocurrency has been debated. Although many customers like the privacy of cryptocurrency, many also argue that it needs more transparency and stability.[78]

Environmental

Technology has impacted the world with negative and positive environmental impacts, which are usually the reverse of the initial damage, such as; the creation of pollution and the attempt to undo said pollution,[81] deforestation and the reversing of deforestation,[82] and oil spills. All of these have had a significant impact on the environment of the earth. As technology has advanced, so has the negative environmental impact, with the releasing of greenhouse gases, like methane and carbon dioxide, into the atmosphere, causing the greenhouse effect, gradually heating the earth and causing global warming. All of this has become worse with the advancement of technology.[83]

Pollution

Pollution, the presence of contaminants in an environment that causes adverse effects, could have been present as early as the Inca empire. They used a lead sulfide flux in the smelting of ores, along with the use of a wind-drafted clay kiln, which released lead into the atmosphere and the sediment of rivers.[84]

Philosophy

Philosophy of technology is a branch of philosophy that studies the "practice of designing and creating artifacts", and the "nature of the things so created."[85] It emerged as a discipline over the past two centuries, and has grown "considerably" since the 1970s.[86] The humanities philosophy of technology is concerned with the "meaning of technology for, and its impact on, society and culture".[85]

Initially, technology was seen as an extension of the human organism that replicated or amplified bodily and mental faculties.[87] Marx framed it as a tool used by capitalists to oppress the proletariat, but believed that technology would be a fundamentally liberating force once it was "freed from societal deformations". Second-wave philosophers like Ortega later shifted their focus from economics and politics to "daily life and living in a techno-material culture", arguing that technology could oppress "even the members of the bourgeoisie who were its ostensible masters and possessors." Third-stage philosophers like Don Ihde and Albert Borgmann represent a turn toward de-generalization and empiricism, and considered how humans can learn to live with technology.[86][page needed]

Early scholarship on technology was split between two arguments: technological determinism, and social construction. Technological determinism is the idea that technologies cause unavoidable social changes.[88]: 95  It usually encompasses a related argument, technological autonomy, which asserts that technological progress follows a natural progression and cannot be prevented.[89] Social constructivists[who?] argue that technologies follow no natural progression, and are shaped by cultural values, laws, politics, and economic incentives. Modern scholarship has shifted towards an analysis of sociotechnical systems, "assemblages of things, people, practices, and meanings", looking at the value judgments that shape technology.[88][page needed]

Cultural critic Neil Postman distinguished tool-using societies from technological societies and from what he called "technopolies," societies that are dominated by an ideology of technological and scientific progress to the detriment of other cultural practices, values, and world views.[90] Herbert Marcuse and John Zerzan suggest that technological society will inevitably deprive us of our freedom and psychological health.[91]

Ethics

The ethics of technology is an interdisciplinary subfield of ethics that analyzes technology's ethical implications and explores ways to mitigate the potential negative impacts of new technologies. There is a broad range of ethical issues revolving around technology, from specific areas of focus affecting professionals working with technology to broader social, ethical, and legal issues concerning the role of technology in society and everyday life.[92]

Prominent debates have surrounded genetically modified organisms, the use of robotic soldiers, algorithmic bias, and the issue of aligning AI behavior with human values.[93]

Technology ethics encompasses several key fields. Bioethics looks at ethical issues surrounding biotechnologies and modern medicine, including cloning, human genetic engineering, and stem cell research. Computer ethics focuses on issues related to computing. Cyberethics explores internet-related issues like intellectual property rights, privacy, and censorship. Nanoethics examines issues surrounding the alteration of matter at the atomic and molecular level in various disciplines including computer science, engineering, and biology. And engineering ethics deals with the professional standards of engineers, including software engineers and their moral responsibilities to the public.[94]

A wide branch of technology ethics is concerned with the ethics of artificial intelligence: it includes robot ethics, which deals with ethical issues involved in the design, construction, use, and treatment of robots,[95] as well as machine ethics, which is concerned with ensuring the ethical behavior of artificially intelligent agents.[96] Within the field of AI ethics, significant yet-unsolved research problems include AI alignment (ensuring that AI behaviors are aligned with their creators' intended goals and interests) and the reduction of algorithmic bias. Some researchers have warned against the hypothetical risk of an AI takeover, and have advocated for the use of AI capability control in addition to AI alignment methods.

Other fields of ethics have had to contend with technology-related issues, including military ethics, media ethics, and educational ethics.

Futures studies

Futures studies is the systematic and interdisciplinary study of social and technological progress. It aims to quantitatively and qualitatively explore the range of plausible futures and to incorporate human values in the development of new technologies.[97]: 54  More generally, futures researchers are interested in improving "the freedom and welfare of humankind".[97]: 73  It relies on a thorough quantitative and qualitative analysis of past and present technological trends, and attempts to rigorously extrapolate them into the future.[97] Science fiction is often used as a source of ideas.[97]: 173  Futures research methodologies include survey research, modeling, statistical analysis, and computer simulations.[97]: 187 

Existential risk

Existential risk researchers analyze risks that could lead to human extinction or civilizational collapse, and look for ways to build resilience against them.[98][99] Relevant research centers include the Cambridge Center for the Study of Existential Risk, and the Stanford Existential Risk Initiative.[100] Future technologies may contribute to the risks of artificial general intelligence, biological warfare, nuclear warfare, nanotechnology, anthropogenic climate change, global warming, or stable global totalitarianism, though technologies may also help us mitigate asteroid impacts and gamma-ray bursts.[101] In 2019 philosopher Nick Bostrom introduced the notion of a vulnerable world, "one in which there is some level of technological development at which civilization almost certainly gets devastated by default", citing the risks of a pandemic caused by bioterrorists, or an arms race triggered by the development of novel armaments and the loss of mutual assured destruction.[102] He invites policymakers to question the assumptions that technological progress is always beneficial, that scientific openness is always preferable, or that they can afford to wait until a dangerous technology has been invented before they prepare mitigations.[102]

Emerging technologies

 
Experimental 3D printing of muscle tissue

Emerging technologies are novel technologies whose development or practical applications are still largely unrealized. They include nanotechnology, biotechnology, robotics, 3D printing, blockchains, and artificial intelligence.

In 2005, futurist Ray Kurzweil claimed the next technological revolution would rest upon advances in genetics, nanotechnology, and robotics, with robotics being the most impactful of the three technologies.[103] Genetic engineering will allow far greater control over human biological nature through a process called directed evolution. Some thinkers believe that this may shatter our sense of self, and have urged for renewed public debate exploring the issue more thoroughly;[104] others fear that directed evolution could lead to eugenics or extreme social inequality. Nanotechnology will grant us the ability to manipulate matter "at the molecular and atomic scale",[105] which could allow us to reshape ourselves and our environment in fundamental ways.[106] Nanobots could be used within the human body to destroy cancer cells or form new body parts, blurring the line between biology and technology.[107] Autonomous robots have undergone rapid progress, and are expected to replace humans at many dangerous tasks, including search and rescue, bomb disposal, firefighting, and war.[108]

Estimates on the advent of artificial general intelligence vary, but half of machine learning experts surveyed in 2018 believe that AI will "accomplish every task better and more cheaply" than humans by 2063, and automate all human jobs by 2140.[109] This expected technological unemployment has led to calls for increased emphasis on computer science education and debates about universal basic income. Political science experts predict that this could lead to a rise in extremism, while others see it as an opportunity to usher in a post-scarcity economy.

Movements

Appropriate technology

Some segments of the 1960s hippie counterculture grew to dislike urban living and developed a preference for locally autonomous, sustainable, and decentralized technology, termed appropriate technology. This later influenced hacker culture and technopaganism.

Technological utopianism

Technological utopianism refers to the belief that technological development is a moral good, which can and should bring about a utopia, that is, a society in which laws, governments, and social conditions serve the needs of all its citizens.[110] Examples of techno-utopian goals include post-scarcity economics, life extension, mind uploading, cryonics, and the creation of artificial superintelligence. Major techno-utopian movements include transhumanism and singularitarianism.

The transhumanism movement is founded upon the "continued evolution of human life beyond its current human form" through science and technology, informed by "life-promoting principles and values."[111] The movement gained wider popularity in the early 21st century.[112]


Singularitarians believe that machine superintelligence will "accelerate technological progress" by orders of magnitude and "create even more intelligent entities ever faster", which may lead to a pace of societal and technological change that is "incomprehensible" to us. This event horizon is known as the technological singularity.[113]

Major figures of techno-utopianism include Ray Kurzweil and Nick Bostrom. Techno-utopianism has attracted both praise and criticism from progressive, religious, and conservative thinkers.[114]

Anti-technology backlash

Technology's central role in our lives has drawn concerns and backlash. The backlash against technology is not a uniform movement and encompasses many heterogeneous ideologies.[115]

The earliest known revolt against technology was Luddism, a pushback against early automation in textile production. Automation had resulted in a need for fewer workers, a process known as technological unemployment.

Between the 1970s and 1990s, American terrorist Ted Kaczynski carried out a series of bombings across America and published the Unabomber Manifesto denouncing technology's negative impacts on nature and human freedom. The essay resonated with a large part of the American public.[116] It was partly inspired by Jacques Ellul's The Technological Society.[117]

Some subcultures, like the off-the-grid movement, advocate a withdrawal from technology and a return to nature. The ecovillage movement seeks to reestablish harmony between technology and nature.[118]

Relation to science and engineering

 
Antoine Lavoisier experimenting with combustion generated by amplified sunlight

Engineering is the process by which technology is developed. It often requires problem-solving under strict constraints.[119] Technological development is "action-oriented", while scientific knowledge is fundamentally explanatory.[120] Polish philosopher Henryk Skolimowski framed it like so: "science concerns itself with what is, technology with what is to be."[121]: 375 

The direction of causality between scientific discovery and technological innovation has been debated by scientists, philosophers and policymakers.[122] Because innovation is often undertaken at the edge of scientific knowledge, most technologies are not derived from scientific knowledge, but instead from engineering, tinkering and chance.[123]: 217–240  For example, in the 1940s and 1950s, when knowledge of turbulent combustion or fluid dynamics was still crude, jet engines were invented through "running the device to destruction, analyzing what broke [...] and repeating the process".[119] Scientific explanations often follow technological developments rather than preceding them.[123]: 217–240  Many discoveries also arose from pure chance, like the discovery of penicillin as a result of accidental lab contamination.[124] Since the 1960s, the assumption that government funding of basic research would lead to the discovery of marketable technologies has lost credibility.[125][126] Probabilist Nassim Taleb argues that national research programs that implement the notions of serendipity and convexity through frequent trial and error are more likely to lead to useful innovations than research that aims to reach specific outcomes.[123][127]

Despite this, modern technology is increasingly reliant on deep, domain-specific scientific knowledge. In 1975, there was an average of one citation of scientific literature in every three patents granted in the U.S.; by 1989, this increased to an average of one citation per patent. The average was skewed upwards by patents related to the pharmaceutical industry, chemistry, and electronics.[128] A 2021 analysis shows that patents that are based on scientific discoveries are on average 26% more valuable than equivalent non-science-based patents.[129]

Other animal species

 
This adult gorilla uses a branch as a walking stick to gauge the water's depth.

The use of basic technology is also a feature of non-human animal species. Tool use was once considered a defining characteristic of the genus Homo.[130] This view was supplanted after discovering evidence of tool use among chimpanzees and other primates,[131] dolphins,[132] and crows.[133][134] For example, researchers have observed wild chimpanzees using basic foraging tools, pestles, levers, using leaves as sponges, and tree bark or vines as probes to fish termites.[135] West African chimpanzees use stone hammers and anvils for cracking nuts,[136] as do capuchin monkeys of Boa Vista, Brazil.[137] Tool use is not the only form of animal technology use; for example, beaver dams, built with wooden sticks or large stones, are a technology with "dramatic" impacts on river habitats and ecosystems.[138]

Popular culture

The relationship of humanity with technology has been explored in science-fiction literature, for example in Brave New World, A Clockwork Orange, Nineteen Eighty-Four, Isaac Asimov's essays, and movies like Minority Report, Total Recall, Gattaca, and Inception. It has spawned the dystopian and futuristic cyberpunk genre, which juxtaposes futuristic technology with societal collapse, dystopia or decay.[139] Notable cyberpunk works include William Gibson's Neuromancer novel, and movies like Blade Runner, and The Matrix.

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Skolnikoff, Eugene B. (1993). "The Setting". The Elusive Transformation: Science, Technology, and the Evolution of International Politics. Princeton University Press. p. 13. ISBN 0-691-08631-1. JSTOR j.ctt7rpm1. LCCN 92022141. OCLC 26128186. I find the most useful conceptual definition for this study to be that given by Harvey Brooks, who has defined technology ... as 'knowledge of how to fulfill certain human purposes in a specifiable and reproducible way.'
  2. ^ Salomon 1984, pp. 117–118: "The first pole, that of the naturalisation of a new discipline within the university curriculum, was presented by Christian Wolff in 1728, in Chapter III of the "Preliminary discourse" to his Philosophia rationalisis sive Logica: 'Technology is the science of skills and works of skill, or, if one prefers, the science of things made by man's labour, chiefly through the use of his hands.'"
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Further reading

  • Gribbin, John, "Alone in the Milky Way: Why we are probably the only intelligent life in the galaxy", Scientific American, vol. 319, no. 3 (September 2018), pp. 94–99. "Is life likely to exist elsewhere in the [Milky Way] galaxy? Almost certainly yes, given the speed with which it appeared on Earth. Is another technological civilization likely to exist today? Almost certainly no, given the chain of circumstances that led to our existence. These considerations suggest that we are unique not just on our planet but in the whole Milky Way. And if our planet is so special, it becomes all the more important to preserve this unique world for ourselves, our descendants and the many creatures that call Earth home." (p. 99.)

technology, other, uses, disambiguation, application, conceptual, knowledge, achieving, practical, goals, especially, reproducible, word, technology, also, mean, products, resulting, from, such, efforts, including, both, tangible, tools, such, utensils, machin. For other uses see Technology disambiguation Technology is the application of conceptual knowledge for achieving practical goals especially in a reproducible way 1 The word technology can also mean the products resulting from such efforts 2 3 including both tangible tools such as utensils or machines and intangible ones such as software Technology plays a critical role in science engineering and everyday life A steam turbine with the case opened an example of energy technologyTechnological advancements have led to significant changes in society The earliest known technology is the stone tool used during prehistoric times followed by the control of fire which contributed to the growth of the human brain and the development of language during the Ice Age The invention of the wheel in the Bronze Age allowed greater travel and the creation of more complex machines More recent technological inventions including the printing press telephone and the Internet have lowered barriers to communication and ushered in the knowledge economy While technology contributes to economic development and improves human prosperity it can also have negative impacts like pollution and resource depletion and can cause social harms like technological unemployment resulting from automation As a result there are ongoing philosophical and political debates about the role and use of technology the ethics of technology and ways to mitigate its downsides Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Prehistoric 2 2 Neolithic 2 3 Ancient 2 4 Pre modern 2 5 Modern 3 Impact 3 1 Social 3 1 1 Jobs 3 1 2 Security 3 2 Environmental 3 2 1 Pollution 4 Philosophy 5 Ethics 6 Futures studies 6 1 Existential risk 7 Emerging technologies 8 Movements 8 1 Appropriate technology 8 2 Technological utopianism 8 3 Anti technology backlash 9 Relation to science and engineering 10 Other animal species 11 Popular culture 12 See also 13 References 13 1 Citations 13 2 Sources 14 Further readingEtymologyTechnology is a term dating back to the early 17th century that meant systematic treatment from Greek Texnologia from the Greek texnh romanized tekhne lit craft art and logia study knowledge 4 5 It is predated in use by the Ancient Greek word tekhne used to mean knowledge of how to make things which encompassed activities like architecture 6 Starting in the 19th century continental Europeans started using the terms Technik German or technique French to refer to a way of doing which included all technical arts such as dancing navigation or printing whether or not they required tools or instruments 7 At the time Technologie German and French referred either to the academic discipline studying the methods of arts and crafts or to the political discipline intended to legislate on the functions of the arts and crafts 8 Since the distinction between Technik and Technologie is absent in English both were translated as technology The term was previously uncommon in English and mostly referred to the academic discipline as in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology 9 In the 20th century as a result of scientific progress and the Second Industrial Revolution technology stopped being considered a distinct academic discipline and took on its current day meaning the systemic use of knowledge to practical ends 10 HistoryMain articles History of technology and Timeline of historic inventions Prehistoric Main article Prehistoric technology nbsp A person holding a hand axeTools were initially developed by hominids through observation and trial and error 11 Around 2 Mya million years ago they learned to make the first stone tools by hammering flakes off a pebble forming a sharp hand axe 12 This practice was refined 75 kya thousand years ago into pressure flaking enabling much finer work 13 The discovery of fire was described by Charles Darwin as possibly the greatest ever made by man 14 Archaeological dietary and social evidence point to continuous human fire use at least 1 5 Mya 15 Fire fueled with wood and charcoal allowed early humans to cook their food to increase its digestibility improving its nutrient value and broadening the number of foods that could be eaten 16 The cooking hypothesis proposes that the ability to cook promoted an increase in hominid brain size though some researchers find the evidence inconclusive 17 Archaeological evidence of hearths was dated to 790 kya researchers believe this is likely to have intensified human socialization and may have contributed to the emergence of language 18 19 Other technological advances made during the Paleolithic era include clothing and shelter 20 No consensus exists on the approximate time of adoption of either technology but archaeologists have found archaeological evidence of clothing 90 120 kya 21 and shelter 450 kya 20 As the Paleolithic era progressed dwellings became more sophisticated and more elaborate as early as 380 kya humans were constructing temporary wood huts 22 23 Clothing adapted from the fur and hides of hunted animals helped humanity expand into colder regions humans began to migrate out of Africa around 200 kya initially moving to Eurasia 24 25 26 Neolithic Main article Neolithic Revolution nbsp An array of Neolithic artifacts including bracelets axe heads chisels and polishing toolsThe Neolithic Revolution or First Agricultural Revolution brought about an acceleration of technological innovation and a consequent increase in social complexity 27 The invention of the polished stone axe was a major advance that allowed large scale forest clearance and farming 28 This use of polished stone axes increased greatly in the Neolithic but was originally used in the preceding Mesolithic in some areas such as Ireland 29 Agriculture fed larger populations and the transition to sedentism allowed for the simultaneous raising of more children as infants no longer needed to be carried around by nomads Additionally children could contribute labor to the raising of crops more readily than they could participate in hunter gatherer activities 30 31 With this increase in population and availability of labor came an increase in labor specialization 32 What triggered the progression from early Neolithic villages to the first cities such as Uruk and the first civilizations such as Sumer is not specifically known however the emergence of increasingly hierarchical social structures and specialized labor of trade and war amongst adjacent cultures and the need for collective action to overcome environmental challenges such as irrigation are all thought to have played a role 33 The invention of writing led to the spread of cultural knowledge and became the basis for history libraries schools and scientific research 34 Continuing improvements led to the furnace and bellows and provided for the first time the ability to smelt and forge gold copper silver and lead native metals found in relatively pure form in nature 35 The advantages of copper tools over stone bone and wooden tools were quickly apparent to early humans and native copper was probably used from near the beginning of Neolithic times about 10 ka 36 Native copper does not naturally occur in large amounts but copper ores are quite common and some of them produce metal easily when burned in wood or charcoal fires Eventually the working of metals led to the discovery of alloys such as bronze and brass about 4 000 BCE The first use of iron alloys such as steel dates to around 1 800 BCE 37 38 Ancient Main article Ancient technology Ancient technologyEgyptian technology Indian technology Chinese technology Greek technology Roman technology Iranian technology nbsp The wheel was invented c 4 000 BCE After harnessing fire humans discovered other forms of energy The earliest known use of wind power is the sailing ship the earliest record of a ship under sail is that of a Nile boat dating to around 7 000 BCE 39 From prehistoric times Egyptians likely used the power of the annual flooding of the Nile to irrigate their lands gradually learning to regulate much of it through purposely built irrigation channels and catch basins 40 The ancient Sumerians in Mesopotamia used a complex system of canals and levees to divert water from the Tigris and Euphrates rivers for irrigation 41 Archaeologists estimate that the wheel was invented independently and concurrently in Mesopotamia in present day Iraq the Northern Caucasus Maykop culture and Central Europe 42 Time estimates range from 5 500 to 3 000 BCE with most experts putting it closer to 4 000 BCE 43 The oldest artifacts with drawings depicting wheeled carts date from about 3 500 BCE 44 More recently the oldest known wooden wheel in the world was found in the Ljubljana Marsh of Slovenia 45 The invention of the wheel revolutionized trade and war It did not take long to discover that wheeled wagons could be used to carry heavy loads The ancient Sumerians used a potter s wheel and may have invented it 46 A stone pottery wheel found in the city state of Ur dates to around 3 429 BCE 47 and even older fragments of wheel thrown pottery have been found in the same area 47 Fast rotary potters wheels enabled early mass production of pottery but it was the use of the wheel as a transformer of energy through water wheels windmills and even treadmills that revolutionized the application of nonhuman power sources The first two wheeled carts were derived from travois 48 and were first used in Mesopotamia and Iran in around 3 000 BCE 48 The oldest known constructed roadways are the stone paved streets of the city state of Ur dating to c 4 000 BCE 49 and timber roads leading through the swamps of Glastonbury England dating to around the same period 49 The first long distance road which came into use around 3 500 BCE 49 spanned 2 400 km from the Persian Gulf to the Mediterranean Sea 49 but was not paved and was only partially maintained 49 In around 2 000 BCE the Minoans on the Greek island of Crete built a 50 km road leading from the palace of Gortyn on the south side of the island through the mountains to the palace of Knossos on the north side of the island 49 Unlike the earlier road the Minoan road was completely paved 49 nbsp Photograph of the Pont du Gard in France one of the most famous ancient Roman aqueducts 50 Ancient Minoan private homes had running water 51 A bathtub virtually identical to modern ones was unearthed at the Palace of Knossos 51 52 Several Minoan private homes also had toilets which could be flushed by pouring water down the drain 51 The ancient Romans had many public flush toilets 52 which emptied into an extensive sewage system 52 The primary sewer in Rome was the Cloaca Maxima 52 construction began on it in the sixth century BCE and it is still in use today 52 The ancient Romans also had a complex system of aqueducts 50 which were used to transport water across long distances 50 The first Roman aqueduct was built in 312 BCE 50 The eleventh and final ancient Roman aqueduct was built in 226 CE 50 Put together the Roman aqueducts extended over 450 km 50 but less than 70 km of this was above ground and supported by arches 50 Pre modern Main articles Medieval technology and Renaissance technology Innovations continued through the Middle Ages with the introduction of silk production in Asia and later Europe the horse collar and horseshoes Simple machines such as the lever the screw and the pulley were combined into more complicated tools such as the wheelbarrow windmills and clocks 53 A system of universities developed and spread scientific ideas and practices including Oxford and Cambridge 54 The Renaissance era produced many innovations including the introduction of the movable type printing press to Europe which facilitated the communication of knowledge Technology became increasingly influenced by science beginning a cycle of mutual advancement 55 Modern Main articles Industrial Revolution Second Industrial Revolution and Digital Revolution nbsp The automobile revolutionized personal transportation Starting in the United Kingdom in the 18th century the discovery of steam power set off the Industrial Revolution which saw wide ranging technological discoveries particularly in the areas of agriculture manufacturing mining metallurgy and transport and the widespread application of the factory system 56 This was followed a century later by the Second Industrial Revolution which led to rapid scientific discovery standardization and mass production New technologies were developed including sewage systems electricity light bulbs electric motors railroads automobiles and airplanes These technological advances led to significant developments in medicine chemistry physics and engineering 57 They were accompanied by consequential social change with the introduction of skyscrapers accompanied by rapid urbanization 58 Communication improved with the invention of the telegraph the telephone the radio and television 59 The 20th century brought a host of innovations In physics the discovery of nuclear fission in the Atomic Age led to both nuclear weapons and nuclear power Computers were invented and later shifted from analog to digital in the Digital Revolution Information technology particularly optical fiber and optical amplifiers led to the birth of the Internet which ushered in the Information Age The Space Age began with the launch of Sputnik 1 in 1957 and later the launch of crewed missions to the moon in the 1960s Organized efforts to search for extraterrestrial intelligence have used radio telescopes to detect signs of technology use or technosignatures given off by alien civilizations In medicine new technologies were developed for diagnosis CT PET and MRI scanning treatment like the dialysis machine defibrillator pacemaker and a wide array of new pharmaceutical drugs and research like interferon cloning and DNA microarrays 60 Complex manufacturing and construction techniques and organizations are needed to make and maintain more modern technologies and entire industries have arisen to develop succeeding generations of increasingly more complex tools Modern technology increasingly relies on training and education their designers builders maintainers and users often require sophisticated general and specific training 61 Moreover these technologies have become so complex that entire fields have developed to support them including engineering medicine and computer science and other fields have become more complex such as construction transportation and architecture ImpactMain article Technology and society Technological change is the largest cause of long term economic growth 62 63 Throughout human history energy production was the main constraint on economic development and new technologies allowed humans to significantly increase the amount of available energy First came fire which made edible a wider variety of foods and made it less physically demanding to digest them Fire also enabled smelting and the use of tin copper and iron tools used for hunting or tradesmanship Then came the agricultural revolution humans no longer needed to hunt or gather to survive and began to settle in towns and cities forming more complex societies with militaries and more organized forms of religion 64 Technologies have contributed to human welfare through increased prosperity improved comfort and quality of life and medical progress but they can also disrupt existing social hierarchies cause pollution and harm individuals or groups Recent years have brought about a rise in social media s cultural prominence with potential repercussions on democracy and economic and social life Early on the internet was seen as a liberation technology that would democratize knowledge improve access to education and promote democracy Modern research has turned to investigate the internet s downsides including disinformation polarization hate speech and propaganda 65 Since the 1970s technology s impact on the environment has been criticized leading to a surge in investment in solar wind and other forms of clean energy Social Jobs Since the invention of the wheel technologies have helped increase humans economic output Past automation has both substituted and complemented labor machines replaced humans at some lower paying jobs for example in agriculture but this was compensated by the creation of new higher paying jobs 66 Studies have found that computers did not create significant net technological unemployment 67 Due to artificial intelligence being far more capable than computers and still being in its infancy it is not known whether it will follow the same trend the question has been debated at length among economists and policymakers A 2017 survey found no clear consensus among economists on whether AI would increase long term unemployment 68 According to the World Economic Forum s The Future of Jobs Report 2020 AI is predicted to replace 85 million jobs worldwide and create 97 million new jobs by 2025 69 70 From 1990 to 2007 a study in the U S by MIT economist Daron Acemoglu showed that an addition of one robot for every 1 000 workers decreased the employment to population ratio by 0 2 or about 3 3 workers and lowered wages by 0 42 71 72 Concerns about technology replacing human labor however are long lasting As US president Lyndon Johnson said in 1964 Technology is creating both new opportunities and new obligations for us opportunity for greater productivity and progress obligation to be sure that no workingman no family must pay an unjust price for progress upon signing the National Commission on Technology Automation and Economic Progress bill 73 74 75 76 77 Security With the growing reliance of technology there have been security and privacy concerns along with it Billions of people use different online payment methods such as WeChat Pay PayPal Alipay and much more to help transfer money Although security measures are placed some criminals are able to bypass them 78 In March 2022 North Korea used Blender io a mixer which helped them to hide their cryptocurrency exchanges to launder over 20 5 million in cryptocurrency from Axie Infinity and steal over 600 million worth of cryptocurrency from the game s owner Because of this the U S Treasury Department sanctioned Blender io which marked the first time it has taken action against a mixer to try and crack down on North Korean hackers 79 80 The privacy of cryptocurrency has been debated Although many customers like the privacy of cryptocurrency many also argue that it needs more transparency and stability 78 Environmental Technology has impacted the world with negative and positive environmental impacts which are usually the reverse of the initial damage such as the creation of pollution and the attempt to undo said pollution 81 deforestation and the reversing of deforestation 82 and oil spills All of these have had a significant impact on the environment of the earth As technology has advanced so has the negative environmental impact with the releasing of greenhouse gases like methane and carbon dioxide into the atmosphere causing the greenhouse effect gradually heating the earth and causing global warming All of this has become worse with the advancement of technology 83 Pollution Pollution the presence of contaminants in an environment that causes adverse effects could have been present as early as the Inca empire They used a lead sulfide flux in the smelting of ores along with the use of a wind drafted clay kiln which released lead into the atmosphere and the sediment of rivers 84 PhilosophyMain article Philosophy of technology Philosophy of technology is a branch of philosophy that studies the practice of designing and creating artifacts and the nature of the things so created 85 It emerged as a discipline over the past two centuries and has grown considerably since the 1970s 86 The humanities philosophy of technology is concerned with the meaning of technology for and its impact on society and culture 85 Initially technology was seen as an extension of the human organism that replicated or amplified bodily and mental faculties 87 Marx framed it as a tool used by capitalists to oppress the proletariat but believed that technology would be a fundamentally liberating force once it was freed from societal deformations Second wave philosophers like Ortega later shifted their focus from economics and politics to daily life and living in a techno material culture arguing that technology could oppress even the members of the bourgeoisie who were its ostensible masters and possessors Third stage philosophers like Don Ihde and Albert Borgmann represent a turn toward de generalization and empiricism and considered how humans can learn to live with technology 86 page needed Early scholarship on technology was split between two arguments technological determinism and social construction Technological determinism is the idea that technologies cause unavoidable social changes 88 95 It usually encompasses a related argument technological autonomy which asserts that technological progress follows a natural progression and cannot be prevented 89 Social constructivists who argue that technologies follow no natural progression and are shaped by cultural values laws politics and economic incentives Modern scholarship has shifted towards an analysis of sociotechnical systems assemblages of things people practices and meanings looking at the value judgments that shape technology 88 page needed Cultural critic Neil Postman distinguished tool using societies from technological societies and from what he called technopolies societies that are dominated by an ideology of technological and scientific progress to the detriment of other cultural practices values and world views 90 Herbert Marcuse and John Zerzan suggest that technological society will inevitably deprive us of our freedom and psychological health 91 EthicsMain article Ethics of technology The ethics of technology is an interdisciplinary subfield of ethics that analyzes technology s ethical implications and explores ways to mitigate the potential negative impacts of new technologies There is a broad range of ethical issues revolving around technology from specific areas of focus affecting professionals working with technology to broader social ethical and legal issues concerning the role of technology in society and everyday life 92 Prominent debates have surrounded genetically modified organisms the use of robotic soldiers algorithmic bias and the issue of aligning AI behavior with human values 93 Technology ethics encompasses several key fields Bioethics looks at ethical issues surrounding biotechnologies and modern medicine including cloning human genetic engineering and stem cell research Computer ethics focuses on issues related to computing Cyberethics explores internet related issues like intellectual property rights privacy and censorship Nanoethics examines issues surrounding the alteration of matter at the atomic and molecular level in various disciplines including computer science engineering and biology And engineering ethics deals with the professional standards of engineers including software engineers and their moral responsibilities to the public 94 A wide branch of technology ethics is concerned with the ethics of artificial intelligence it includes robot ethics which deals with ethical issues involved in the design construction use and treatment of robots 95 as well as machine ethics which is concerned with ensuring the ethical behavior of artificially intelligent agents 96 Within the field of AI ethics significant yet unsolved research problems include AI alignment ensuring that AI behaviors are aligned with their creators intended goals and interests and the reduction of algorithmic bias Some researchers have warned against the hypothetical risk of an AI takeover and have advocated for the use of AI capability control in addition to AI alignment methods Other fields of ethics have had to contend with technology related issues including military ethics media ethics and educational ethics Futures studiesMain article Futures studies Futures studies is the systematic and interdisciplinary study of social and technological progress It aims to quantitatively and qualitatively explore the range of plausible futures and to incorporate human values in the development of new technologies 97 54 More generally futures researchers are interested in improving the freedom and welfare of humankind 97 73 It relies on a thorough quantitative and qualitative analysis of past and present technological trends and attempts to rigorously extrapolate them into the future 97 Science fiction is often used as a source of ideas 97 173 Futures research methodologies include survey research modeling statistical analysis and computer simulations 97 187 Existential risk Main article Global catastrophic risk Existential risk researchers analyze risks that could lead to human extinction or civilizational collapse and look for ways to build resilience against them 98 99 Relevant research centers include the Cambridge Center for the Study of Existential Risk and the Stanford Existential Risk Initiative 100 Future technologies may contribute to the risks of artificial general intelligence biological warfare nuclear warfare nanotechnology anthropogenic climate change global warming or stable global totalitarianism though technologies may also help us mitigate asteroid impacts and gamma ray bursts 101 In 2019 philosopher Nick Bostrom introduced the notion of a vulnerable world one in which there is some level of technological development at which civilization almost certainly gets devastated by default citing the risks of a pandemic caused by bioterrorists or an arms race triggered by the development of novel armaments and the loss of mutual assured destruction 102 He invites policymakers to question the assumptions that technological progress is always beneficial that scientific openness is always preferable or that they can afford to wait until a dangerous technology has been invented before they prepare mitigations 102 Emerging technologiesMain article Emerging technologies nbsp Experimental 3D printing of muscle tissueEmerging technologies are novel technologies whose development or practical applications are still largely unrealized They include nanotechnology biotechnology robotics 3D printing blockchains and artificial intelligence In 2005 futurist Ray Kurzweil claimed the next technological revolution would rest upon advances in genetics nanotechnology and robotics with robotics being the most impactful of the three technologies 103 Genetic engineering will allow far greater control over human biological nature through a process called directed evolution Some thinkers believe that this may shatter our sense of self and have urged for renewed public debate exploring the issue more thoroughly 104 others fear that directed evolution could lead to eugenics or extreme social inequality Nanotechnology will grant us the ability to manipulate matter at the molecular and atomic scale 105 which could allow us to reshape ourselves and our environment in fundamental ways 106 Nanobots could be used within the human body to destroy cancer cells or form new body parts blurring the line between biology and technology 107 Autonomous robots have undergone rapid progress and are expected to replace humans at many dangerous tasks including search and rescue bomb disposal firefighting and war 108 Estimates on the advent of artificial general intelligence vary but half of machine learning experts surveyed in 2018 believe that AI will accomplish every task better and more cheaply than humans by 2063 and automate all human jobs by 2140 109 This expected technological unemployment has led to calls for increased emphasis on computer science education and debates about universal basic income Political science experts predict that this could lead to a rise in extremism while others see it as an opportunity to usher in a post scarcity economy MovementsAppropriate technology Main article Appropriate technology Some segments of the 1960s hippie counterculture grew to dislike urban living and developed a preference for locally autonomous sustainable and decentralized technology termed appropriate technology This later influenced hacker culture and technopaganism Technological utopianism Main article Technological utopianism Technological utopianism refers to the belief that technological development is a moral good which can and should bring about a utopia that is a society in which laws governments and social conditions serve the needs of all its citizens 110 Examples of techno utopian goals include post scarcity economics life extension mind uploading cryonics and the creation of artificial superintelligence Major techno utopian movements include transhumanism and singularitarianism The transhumanism movement is founded upon the continued evolution of human life beyond its current human form through science and technology informed by life promoting principles and values 111 The movement gained wider popularity in the early 21st century 112 Singularitarians believe that machine superintelligence will accelerate technological progress by orders of magnitude and create even more intelligent entities ever faster which may lead to a pace of societal and technological change that is incomprehensible to us This event horizon is known as the technological singularity 113 Major figures of techno utopianism include Ray Kurzweil and Nick Bostrom Techno utopianism has attracted both praise and criticism from progressive religious and conservative thinkers 114 Anti technology backlash See also Luddite Neo Luddism and Bioconservatism Technology s central role in our lives has drawn concerns and backlash The backlash against technology is not a uniform movement and encompasses many heterogeneous ideologies 115 The earliest known revolt against technology was Luddism a pushback against early automation in textile production Automation had resulted in a need for fewer workers a process known as technological unemployment Between the 1970s and 1990s American terrorist Ted Kaczynski carried out a series of bombings across America and published the Unabomber Manifesto denouncing technology s negative impacts on nature and human freedom The essay resonated with a large part of the American public 116 It was partly inspired by Jacques Ellul s The Technological Society 117 Some subcultures like the off the grid movement advocate a withdrawal from technology and a return to nature The ecovillage movement seeks to reestablish harmony between technology and nature 118 Relation to science and engineering nbsp Antoine Lavoisier experimenting with combustion generated by amplified sunlightSee also Science and Engineering Engineering is the process by which technology is developed It often requires problem solving under strict constraints 119 Technological development is action oriented while scientific knowledge is fundamentally explanatory 120 Polish philosopher Henryk Skolimowski framed it like so science concerns itself with what is technology with what is to be 121 375 The direction of causality between scientific discovery and technological innovation has been debated by scientists philosophers and policymakers 122 Because innovation is often undertaken at the edge of scientific knowledge most technologies are not derived from scientific knowledge but instead from engineering tinkering and chance 123 217 240 For example in the 1940s and 1950s when knowledge of turbulent combustion or fluid dynamics was still crude jet engines were invented through running the device to destruction analyzing what broke and repeating the process 119 Scientific explanations often follow technological developments rather than preceding them 123 217 240 Many discoveries also arose from pure chance like the discovery of penicillin as a result of accidental lab contamination 124 Since the 1960s the assumption that government funding of basic research would lead to the discovery of marketable technologies has lost credibility 125 126 Probabilist Nassim Taleb argues that national research programs that implement the notions of serendipity and convexity through frequent trial and error are more likely to lead to useful innovations than research that aims to reach specific outcomes 123 127 Despite this modern technology is increasingly reliant on deep domain specific scientific knowledge In 1975 there was an average of one citation of scientific literature in every three patents granted in the U S by 1989 this increased to an average of one citation per patent The average was skewed upwards by patents related to the pharmaceutical industry chemistry and electronics 128 A 2021 analysis shows that patents that are based on scientific discoveries are on average 26 more valuable than equivalent non science based patents 129 Other animal speciesSee also Tool use by animals Structures built by animals and Ecosystem engineer nbsp This adult gorilla uses a branch as a walking stick to gauge the water s depth The use of basic technology is also a feature of non human animal species Tool use was once considered a defining characteristic of the genus Homo 130 This view was supplanted after discovering evidence of tool use among chimpanzees and other primates 131 dolphins 132 and crows 133 134 For example researchers have observed wild chimpanzees using basic foraging tools pestles levers using leaves as sponges and tree bark or vines as probes to fish termites 135 West African chimpanzees use stone hammers and anvils for cracking nuts 136 as do capuchin monkeys of Boa Vista Brazil 137 Tool use is not the only form of animal technology use for example beaver dams built with wooden sticks or large stones are a technology with dramatic impacts on river habitats and ecosystems 138 Popular cultureSee also Science fiction The relationship of humanity with technology has been explored in science fiction literature for example in Brave New World A Clockwork Orange Nineteen Eighty Four Isaac Asimov s essays and movies like Minority Report Total Recall Gattaca and Inception It has spawned the dystopian and futuristic cyberpunk genre which juxtaposes futuristic technology with societal collapse dystopia or decay 139 Notable cyberpunk works include William Gibson s Neuromancer novel and movies like Blade Runner and The Matrix See also nbsp Technology portalBright green environmentalism Ecological modernization Ecomodernism Instrumentation Outline of technology Productivity improving technologies Raw material Resource Technogaianism Techno progressivismReferencesCitations Skolnikoff Eugene B 1993 The Setting The Elusive Transformation Science Technology and the Evolution of International Politics Princeton University Press p 13 ISBN 0 691 08631 1 JSTOR j ctt7rpm1 LCCN 92022141 OCLC 26128186 I find the most useful conceptual definition for this study to be that given by Harvey Brooks who has defined technology as knowledge of how to fulfill certain human purposes in a specifiable and reproducible way Salomon 1984 pp 117 118 The first pole that of the naturalisation of a new discipline within the university curriculum was presented by Christian Wolff in 1728 in Chapter III of the Preliminary discourse to his Philosophia rationalisis sive Logica Technology is the science of skills and works of skill or if one prefers the science of things made by man s labour chiefly through the use of his hands Mitcham Carl 1994 Thinking Through Technology The Path Between Engineering and Philosophy University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 53196 1 LCCN 93044581 OCLC 29518988 Liddell Henry George Scott Robert 1996 1891 Greek English Lexicon Abridged ed Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 910205 8 OCLC 38307662 Simpson J Weiner 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that call Earth home p 99 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Technology amp oldid 1200568506, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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