Technological Understanding: On the cognitive skill involved in the design and use of technological artefacts
Eline de Jong, Sebastian De Haro

TL;DR
The paper explores the concept of understanding in technology, comparing it to scientific understanding and emphasizing its cognitive and practical aspects.
Contribution
It introduces a philosophical framework for technological understanding, linking it to the intelligibility of technological artefacts.
Findings
Technological understanding is defined as the ability to use artefacts to achieve practical aims.
The paper proposes an intelligibility criterion for technological artefacts, analogous to scientific theories.
Examples like MRI and quantum computers illustrate the epistemic dimension of technological understanding.
Abstract
Although several accounts of scientific understanding exist, the concept of understanding in relation to technology remains underexplored. This paper addresses this gap by proposing a philosophical account of technological understanding: the type of understanding that is required for and reflected by successfully designing and using technological artefacts. We develop this notion by building on the concept of scientific understanding. Drawing on parallels between science and technology, and specifically between scientific theories and technological artefacts, we extend the idea of scientific understanding into the realm of technology. We argue that, just as scientific understanding involves the ability to explain a phenomenon using a theory, technological understanding involves the ability to use a technological artefact to realise a practical aim. Both theories and artefacts are tools,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhilosophy and History of Science · Neuroethics, Human Enhancement, Biomedical Innovations · Science Education and Pedagogy
