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Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, Vol. 26, No. 3, 178-188 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/0270467606289197
© 2006 SAGE Publications

Can the University Escape From the Labyrinth of Technology? Part 2: Intellectual Map-Making and the Tension Between Breadth and Depth

Willem H. Vanderburg

University of Toronto

This second part continues the search for ways of overcoming the three limitations of the current intellectual and professional division of labor and its knowledge infrastructure, which were shown to be at the root of the present economic, social and environmental crises. A complementary knowledge strategy is proposed to counterbalance the trade of breadth for depth, based on the creation of intellectual maps. One such map is described for engineering, showing how through the process of industrialization people change technology and how through its influence on human life and society, technology changes people. Because industrialization cannot destroy the matter and energy it requires, it also transforms its relations with the biosphere. Once the connections between technology and everything else are mapped, specialists can inquire into the consequences of their design and decision making that fall beyond their domains of expertise, to introduce a preventive orientation into their work to achieve a better ratio of desired to undesired effects. This is shown for materials and production, energy, work, and cities. In subsequent parts, it will become apparent that this example is paradigmatic for other professions, the social sciences, and the university.

Key Words: intellectual division of labor • knowledge infrastructure • knowledge system • preventive approaches • professional education • intellectual map • environmental crisis


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