Skip to main content
The specific hardware and software manifestations built explicitly on the principles of dynamic-complex systems theory. These are technologies designed to be complex and adaptive, not just to manage complexity. Examples include artificial immune systems for cybersecurity that evolve new defenses, swarm robotics for construction, predictive market simulators that model billions of agents, or personal AI assistants that dynamically reconfigure their own code based on your behavior. They're unpredictable by design, which is both their power and their peril.
*Example: "The new traffic grid is a dynamic-complex systems technology. It doesn't have a schedule; it's a live simulation of every vehicle, pedestrian, and weather pattern, constantly generating and testing flow patterns. It once created a city-wide rolling green wave for a fire truck, but also once diverted all commuters onto a single street for an hour 'to see what would happen.'" Dynamic-Complex Systems Technologies
by Abzugal January 30, 2026
mugGet the Dynamic-Complex Systems Technologies mug.

N-Dimensional Technologies

Devices that interact with or exploit dimensions beyond the standard three of space and one of time. This is the applied wing of the theory. Think: sensors that detect 4D spatial anomalies, communication devices that send data through a folded 5th dimension (explaining FTL), storage devices that use extra dimensions for near-infinite capacity, or weapons that project force from a direction you can't perceive or shield against. They operate on principles that are literally unimaginable to a 3D-bound brain.
*Example: "The alien probe wasn't cloaked; it was using N-Dimensional technology. It existed partially in a rotated 4th spatial dimension. To our 3D sensors, it was just a shimmering, impossible cross-section that we could see but not physically touch or scan, like a 2D being trying to grab the middle of a 3D pencil." N-Dimensional Technologies
by Abzugal January 30, 2026
mugGet the N-Dimensional Technologies mug.
The perspective that technologies are not neutral tools with inevitable effects. They are built by people with specific values, assumptions, and worldviews embedded in their design. A social media algorithm isn't just code; it's a constructed technology that embodies theories about human attention, social interaction, and value (e.g., engagement = profit). These embedded constructions then shape user behavior, often reinforcing the very worldviews used to build them.
Example: "The dating app's 'matching algorithm' wasn't magic; it was a Theory of Constructed Technology in action. It was built on a model of human attraction as a checklist of preferences, which then taught users to see themselves and others as checklists. The technology didn't just find love; it constructed a new way of looking for it." Theory of Constructed Technologies
by Dumu The Void January 30, 2026
mugGet the Theory of Constructed Technologies mug.
The complete toolkit of a baseline, un-augmented human civilization, operating entirely within the limits of classical physics and pre-singularity understanding. This is everything we have now or can plausibly achieve without self-improving AI or intelligence amplification: fossil fuels, fission power, chemical rockets, classical computing, biotechnology as we know it, and materials science based on atomic-scale manipulation. It's the technology of a species that is still the master of its tools, not the other way around. Powerful, but bounded by human cognitive speed and biological lifespans.
Subsingularity/Modosophont (S0) Technologies *Example: Everything from a steam engine to the Large Hadron Collider, the Hubble Space Telescope, a CRISPR gene-editing kit, and the International Space Station are S0 Technologies. They are the pinnacle of what a civilization can build when its smartest minds are unaugmented humans working over decades, using tools that don't fundamentally redesign their own inventors.*
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 3, 2026
mugGet the Subsingularity/Modosophont (S0) Technologies mug.
The concept, developed by economist Giovanni Dosi, that technological innovation isn't random but follows dominant designs and trajectories set by a technological paradigm. This paradigm defines the accepted model for problem-solving, the relevant engineering skills, and the "common sense" about what materials and processes to use. Progress happens within this box until a technological revolution (a shift) shatters it and establishes a new one.
Theory of Technological Paradigms Example: The internal combustion engine defined a technological paradigm for a century. All automotive R&D was about optimizing pistons, fuel, and metal alloys. The shift to the electric vehicle (EV) paradigm isn't just a new car; it's a new rulebook based on batteries, software, and power electronics, making a century of combustion expertise partially obsolete.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 6, 2026
mugGet the Theory of Technological Paradigms mug.
Examines how the very design and infrastructure of technology inherently regulate human action. It’s not just about using tech to surveil; it’s about how platforms, algorithms, and physical devices create environments that make some behaviors easier and others impossible, automating control into the system's architecture.
Theory of Technological Social Control Example: A social media algorithm that demotes or shadowbans content with certain keywords. This is direct, automated technological control. It doesn't require a human censor; the tech system itself is designed to restrict the flow of information and shape public discourse by invisibly governing what can be seen and shared, controlling behavior through interface design.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 7, 2026
mugGet the Theory of Technological Social Control mug.
Examines how the very design and infrastructure of technology inherently regulate human action. It’s not just about using tech to surveil; it’s about how platforms, algorithms, and physical devices create environments that make some behaviors easier and others impossible, automating control into the system's architecture.
Theory of Technological Social Control Examines how the very design and infrastructure of technology inherently regulate human action. It’s not just about using tech to surveil; it’s about how platforms, algorithms, and physical devices create environments that make some behaviors easier and others impossible, automating control into the system's architecture.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 7, 2026
mugGet the Theory of Technological Social Control mug.

Share this definition

Sign in to vote

We'll email you a link to sign in instantly.

Or

Check your email

We sent a link to

Open your email