
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2015
Pages: 329-342
Series: Boston Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science
ISBN (Hardback): 9783319145525
Full citation:
, "On the hazardousness of the concept "technology"", in: Relocating the history of science, Berlin, Springer, 2015


On the hazardousness of the concept "technology"
notes on a conversation between the history of science and the history of technology
pp. 329-342
in: Theodore Arabatzis, Jürgen Renn, Ana Simoes (eds), Relocating the history of science, Berlin, Springer, 2015Abstract
Historians of science and historians of technology have recently turned their attention to the conceptual history of "applied science" and "technology" respectively. "Technology" was a concept introduced in the nineteenth century as concerning both "applied science" and "industrial arts." A developed version of this concept caught on after the first decades of the twentieth century, following the establishment of technological networks and the rise of "Fordism," "Taylorism" and "technocracy." Based on interpretations of the nineteenth-century circuit of the steam engine and the twentieth-century network of electric power, this chapter brings together observations from the history of science, the history of technology and the critique of classic political economy to elaborate on the suggestion that "technology" has been a "hazardous' concept. Central to the argument of the chapter is the retrieval of a correspondence between the conceptual couples "technology"-"technics' and 'surplus value"-"value."
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2015
Pages: 329-342
Series: Boston Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science
ISBN (Hardback): 9783319145525
Full citation:
, "On the hazardousness of the concept "technology"", in: Relocating the history of science, Berlin, Springer, 2015