
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2013
Pages: 139-157
Series: Philosophy & Technology
Full citation:
, "Design for community", Philosophy & Technology 26 (2), 2013, pp. 139-157.


Design for community
toward a communitarian ergonomics
pp. 139-157
in: Philosophy & Technology 26 (2), 2013.Abstract
This paper explores how the designed world could be better supportive of better communal ways of relating. In pursuit of this end, I put the philosophy of technology dealing with the role that technologies play in shaping, directing, mediating, and legislating human action in better communication with a diverse literature concerning community. I argue that community ought to viewed as composed of three interrelated dimensions: experience, structure, and practice. Specifically, it is a psychological sense evoked via a particular arrangement of ties and constellation of social practices guided, at its best, by phronetic reasoning. It is a mode of social being that I set in opposition to networked individualism. I examine the existent and potential communitarian ergonomics of the design of contemporary urban spaces and network devices. However, I conclude that artifacts remain only one part of the picture. A communally ergonomic mode of being requires not only compatible artifacts and built spaces but also an institutional context supportive of community as an economic and political entity.
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2013
Pages: 139-157
Series: Philosophy & Technology
Full citation:
, "Design for community", Philosophy & Technology 26 (2), 2013, pp. 139-157.