Article ID: CBB001221068

Follow Framings: Navigating the Empirical Turn (2009)

unapi

Misa, Thomas J. (Author)


Synthese
Volume: 168, no. 3
Issue: 3
Pages: 357-375

In this paper, I outline several methodological questions that we need to confront. The chief question is how can we identify the nature of technological change and its varied cultural consequences---including social, political, institutional, and economic dimensions---when our different research methods, using distinct `levels' or `scales' of analysis, yield contradictory results. What can we say, in other words, when our findings about technology follow from the framings of our inquiries? In slightly different terms, can we combine insights from the fine-grained social shaping of technology as well as from complementary approaches accenting the technological shaping of society? As a way forward, I will suggest conducting multi-scale inquiries into the processes of technological and cultural change. This will involve recognizing and conceptualizing the analytical scales or levels on which we conduct inquiry (very roughly, micro, meso, macro) as well as outlining strategies for moving within and between these scales or levels. Of course we want and need diverse methodologies for analyzing technology and culture. I find myself in sympathy with geographer Brenner (New state spaces: urban governance and the rescaling of statehood, 2004, p. 7), who aspires to a theoretically precise yet also historically specific conceptualization of [technological change] as a key dimension of social, political and economic life.

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Description Asks how historians “can identify the nature of technological change and its varied cultural consequences [when] different research methods...yield contradictory results.” (from the abstract)


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001221068/

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Authors & Contributors
Horn, Jeff
Liu, Jerry
Wästfelt, Torsten
Simon, Zoltán Boldizsár
Meyer, Jan-Henrik
Scott Kushner
Journals
Technology and Culture
Polhem: Tidskrift för Teknikhistoria
Technikgeschichte: Beiträge zur Geschichte der Technik und Industrie
Science, Technology and Human Values
Indian Journal of History of Science
HOST: Journal of History of Science and Technology
Publishers
Springer Nature
Springer
Concepts
History of technology, as a discipline
Development of technology; change in technology
Economic history
Historical method
Industrial revolution
Economic development
People
Ellul, Jacques
Butterfield, Herbert
Time Periods
21st century
20th century, early
19th century
18th century
Places
China
South Asia
United States
Spain
Scandinavia; Nordic countries
Japan
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