Abstract
The search for an appropriate normative basis for evaluating technology has been conditioned in the last quarter century1 by a type of policy analysis known as technology assessment (TA). While there is no logical necessity that the philosopher of technology frame his/her own understanding of technological phenomena according to the interpretive model which it provides, TA does aim at a comprehensive picture of the factors which define technological choices and, at the same time, directs our attention to the broader social context that is affected, often unintentionally, when a new technology is introduced, or an existing one is significantly modified. Given its claim to comprehensiveness and its growing use among the major industrialized countries, TA deserves careful and thorough analysis.
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Carpenter, S.R. (1983). Technoaxiology: Appropriate Norms for Technology Assessment. In: Durbin, P.T., Rapp, F. (eds) Philosophy and Technology. Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science, vol 80. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-7124-0_8
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