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Topic 9.1Philosophy HL32 flashcards

Philosophy and technology

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Card 1 of 329.1.1
9.1.1
Question

What is technology (broad sense)?

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All Flashcards in Topic 9.1

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9.1.18 cards

Card 1definition
Question

What is technology (broad sense)?

Answer

Any worked-out way of getting things done — a tool, method or machine, from a stone axe to an app.

Card 2concept
Question

Value-neutral view of technology?

Answer

The tool is neither good nor bad in itself — only how a human uses it counts ('guns don't kill people, people do').

Card 3concept
Question

The shaping view of technology?

Answer

A tool is never fully neutral — it comes with a pull that reshapes our habits, so it shapes the user, not just the task.

Card 4concept
Question

Means vs end (technology)?

Answer

A technology can start as a means to an end and quietly become an end in itself — like reaching for your phone with no task in mind.

Card 5example
Question

Best reason AGAINST the neutral view?

Answer

Real technologies aren't blank tools: a phone pulls at your attention and changes how you talk, remember and spend your time.

Card 6example
Question

'Just switch it off' — what's the hidden move?

Answer

It assumes you're fully in control; the strong shaping view says the pull is real and control runs both ways.

Card 7concept
Question

The core question of 9.1.1?

Answer

Not 'is this gadget good or bad?' but 'is technology a neutral means we control, or a force that shapes who we are?'

Card 8comparison
Question

Why isn't a hammer a good model for a phone?

Answer

A hammer sits still until used; a phone actively pulls at your attention and trains your habits.

9.1.28 cards

Card 9concept
Question

Heidegger: technology as 'revealing'?

Answer

Technology is a way of showing us the world — modern tech reveals nature as mere resource, not just a set of machines.

Card 10definition
Question

Standing-reserve (Heidegger)?

Answer

Nature seen as nothing but stockpiled fuel and raw material on tap — like a dammed river reduced to stored power.

Card 11concept
Question

Heidegger's real 'danger' of technology?

Answer

Not any one machine, but that we come to see everything — land, animals, even people — as mere resource to be used.

Card 12concept
Question

Marcel: the loss of the self?

Answer

In a technological world the rich self shrinks into a function — the worker, the user — a replaceable part defined by its job.

Card 13concept
Question

Kapp: organ projection?

Answer

Tools are extensions of our own body — a hammer is a harder fist, a camera an eye that remembers; technology is a continuation of us.

Card 14comparison
Question

How do Kapp and Heidegger clash?

Answer

Kapp finds tools-as-part-of-us reassuring; Heidegger finds that very closeness dangerous, because the tool's way of seeing becomes ours.

Card 15process
Question

The shape of this micro's debate?

Answer

Heidegger (frames nature as resource) → Marcel (flattens the self) → Kapp (extends the body). Two warnings, then a warmer view.

Card 16example
Question

One reply to Marcel?

Answer

Many people do meaningful work and still feel fully themselves — his point is a pull to resist, not a certainty.

9.1.38 cards

Card 17definition
Question

Floridi's 'infosphere'?

Answer

The whole environment of information and digital life we now live inside — we're residents of it, not just visitors.

Card 18concept
Question

Information ethics (Floridi)?

Answer

The idea that information and data can be helped or harmed, so we owe duties of care — keep it truthful, protected and unpolluted.

Card 19concept
Question

New challenges from AI and robotics?

Answer

Could a machine think or feel? Who's responsible when AI harms? Is a robot's care a real relationship or a clever fake?

Card 20concept
Question

New challenges from biotechnology?

Answer

If we can edit our genes, should we? Where's the line between healing and upgrading a human? Do we risk designing people to order?

Card 21concept
Question

Why are AI/biotech questions 'new'?

Answer

They revive old questions (minds, responsibility, human nature) but make them urgent — because now we can actually act on them.

Card 22concept
Question

Social constructivism (technology)?

Answer

Technology and society co-create each other, hand in hand — neither is fully in charge; the tool and the culture make each other.

Card 23concept
Question

Marx on technology?

Answer

The means of production (tools, machines, methods) shape the economic base and so the whole social order — change the tech, change the order.

Card 24comparison
Question

Social constructivism vs Marx?

Answer

Constructivism keeps it two-way and balanced; Marx tilts the arrow — technology of production comes first and drags society behind it.

9.1.48 cards

Card 25concept
Question

The case FOR philosophy guiding technology?

Answer

It asks the 'should we?' questions — value, meaning, responsibility — that engineering skips, and exposes hidden assumptions like 'tech is neutral'.

Card 26concept
Question

The case AGAINST it (the limits)?

Answer

Philosophy is slow, rarely agrees, and can be too abstract to hand us a firm answer in time for a real decision.

Card 27concept
Question

How to answer 'philosophy is powerless here'?

Answer

Challenge the assumption that help means firm answers — asking the right question and checking rushed decisions can matter more.

Card 28concept
Question

The balanced view of philosophy and technology?

Answer

Not an answer-machine, not useless — a questioner and check that keeps the human 'should we?' alive while others ask 'can we?'.

Card 29example
Question

How the topic's thinkers become evidence?

Answer

Heidegger (resource), Marcel (loss of self), Floridi (infosphere) show the deep questions philosophy raises about real tech.

Card 30concept
Question

Why is philosophy's slowness sometimes a strength?

Answer

A slow, careful check on hype can stop a rushed decision everyone later regrets — the opposite of a flaw.

Card 31process
Question

What does 'Evaluate' [25] reward?

Answer

Weighing the case for and against the claim fairly, then reaching a reasoned judgement — not just describing.

Card 32process
Question

The whole topic's arc in one line?

Answer

What is technology? → how it changes being human → the digital age → and can philosophy help us navigate it?

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