Function and use of technical artefacts: social conditions of function ascription |
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Authors: | Marcel Scheele |
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Affiliation: | Department of Philosophy, Delft University of Technology, Jaffalaan 5, NL-2628 BX Delft, The Netherlands |
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Abstract: | It is argued that we cannot understand the notion of proper functions of artefacts independently of social notions. Functions of artefacts are related to social facts via the use of artefacts. The arguments in this article can be used to improve existing function theories that look to the causal history of artefacts to determine the function. A view that takes the intentions of designers into account to determine the proper function is both natural and often correct, but it is shown that there are exceptions to this. Taking a social constitutive element into account may amend these backwards looking theories. An improved theory may either have a disjunctive form—either the history or collective intentions determine the proper function—or, as is suggested in the article, be in the form of an encompassing account that views the designers’ intentions as social, in so far as they are accepted by the users. Designers have authority, which is a social fact. The views argued for here are applied to two existing theories of artefact functions, a causal historic approach and an action theoretic approach. |
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Keywords: | Function Artefact Evaluative judgement Action Collective intentionality |
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