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Created page with "{{Theory |Title=Technological Knowledge as Part of Mosaic |Theory Type=Descriptive |Formulation Text=Propositional technological knowledge can be accepted and be part of a mos..."
{{Theory
|Title=Technological Knowledge as Part of Mosaic
|Theory Type=Descriptive
|Formulation Text=Propositional technological knowledge can be accepted and be part of a mosaic
|Topic=Status of Technological Knowledge
|Authors List=Maxim Mirkin,
|Formulated Year=2018
|Description=There is accepted propositional technological knowledge which appears to exhibit the same patterns of change as questions, theories, and methods in the natural, social, and formal sciences. Technological theories attempting to describe the construction and operation of artifacts as well as to prescribe their correct mode of operation are not merely used, but also often accepted by epistemic agents. Since technology often involves methods different from those found in science and produces normative propositions, many of which remain tacit, one may be tempted to think that changes in technological knowledge should be somehow exempt from the laws of scientific change. Yet, the discussion of the historical cases of sorting algorithms, telescopes, crop rotation, and colorectal cancer surgeries show that technological theories and methods are often an integral part of an epistemic agent’s mosaic and seem to exhibit the same scientonomic patterns of change typical of accepted theories therein. Thus, propositional technological knowledge can be part of a mosaic.
|Resource=Mirkin (2018)
|Page Status=Stub
}}