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The empirical study of technology as a social phenomenon—how technologies are developed, adopted, resisted, and transformed by social forces. Social Sciences of Technology includes science and technology studies (STS), history of technology, sociology of technology, and technology studies. It examines how technologies shape society and how society shapes technologies, revealing that technology is never just tools—it's politics, culture, and power made material.
"You think technology is neutral. Social sciences of technology asks: then why do different societies develop different technologies? Why do technologies have different impacts in different contexts? Why do some technologies fail and others succeed for non-technical reasons? Technology is social, and social science shows how."
by Dumu The Void March 2, 2026
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The application of Critical Theory to technology—examining how technologies are shaped by social forces, how they embed values and power relations, and how they can serve domination or liberation. Critical Theory of Technology asks: Who designs technology? For whom? With what values? How do technologies reinforce hierarchy or enable freedom? Drawing on thinkers like Heidegger, Marcuse, Feenberg, and Winner, it insists that technology is never neutral—it's politics by other means. Understanding technology requires understanding the society that produces it, and imagining technology otherwise requires imagining society otherwise.
"Your phone is just a tool, they say. Critical Theory of Technology asks: a tool designed by whom? With what values? Collecting what data? Serving what interests? Technology isn't neutral; it's frozen politics. The question isn't just what technology does, but who it does it for. Critical theory insists on asking: could technology be different in a different society?"
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
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Theory of FTL Technologies

A speculative framework for the practical applications of faster-than-light capability—not just the physics, but the engineering, the infrastructure, the devices. Theory of FTL Technologies asks: What would an FTL drive actually look like? How would you build it? What would FTL communication devices require? How would FTL change technology at every scale? The theory bridges pure physics and practical engineering, imagining the machines that might someday beat light.
Theory of FTL Technologies "The warp drive requires negative mass and exotic matter. FTL Technologies asks: how would you produce them? What would the ship look like? How would you navigate at speeds where stars blur past? The theory doesn't just dream; it designs. Not yet possible, but someone has to imagine it first."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 5, 2026
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A framework for the practical tools and systems needed for an interstellar civilization—propulsion, communication, life support, governance, economics. Theory of Interstellar Technologies asks: What machines would an interstellar species need? How would they build them? How would they maintain them across centuries? The theory explores the engineering of civilization at cosmic scale.
Theory of Interstellar Technologies "A generation ship is a world—closed ecosystem, artificial gravity, centuries of maintenance. Interstellar Technologies asks: how do you build a world that lasts? What technologies make it possible? The theory doesn't just dream; it designs. Not yet possible, but someone has to imagine it first."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 5, 2026
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