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MODULE 1, LESSON 1

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Republic of the Philippines
Surigao del Sur State University
Tandag City , Surigao del Sur
Telefax No. 086-214-4221
www.sdssu.edu.ph
MODULE ONE
LESSON 1
GE- STS
A Course Pack in
SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY
By STS GROUP
August 2020
Week 2
I.
Preliminaries
COURSE NAME
:
Science, Technology, and Society
COURSE CREDITS
:
3 units
The course deals with interactions
between science and technology and social, cultural, political, and economic
contexts that shape and are shaped by them. (CMO No. 20, series of 2013). This
interdisciplinary course engages students to confront the realities brought about
by science and technology in society. Such realities pervade the personal, the
public, and the global aspects of our living and are integral to human
development. Scientific knowledge and technological development happen in the
context of society with all its socio-political, cultural, economic, and philosophical
underpinnings at play. This course seeks to instill reflective knowledge in the
students that they are able to live the good life and display ethical decision
making in the face of scientific and technological advancement.
COURSE DESCRIPTION
:
PRE-REQUISITE/CO-REQUISITES
:
NONE
COURSE OUTCOMES
In the context of the specific field of specialization, the students will be able to:
LO1
LO2
Design and evaluate solutions for complex
computing problems, and design and
evaluate systems, components or processes
that meet specified needs with appropriate
consideration for public health and safety,
cultural,
societal
and
environmental
considerations.
An ability to recognize the legal, social,
ethical and professional issues involved in the
utilization of computer technology and be
guided by the adoption of appropriate
professional, ethical and legal practices.
II.
Course Overview:
This course pack is specifically produced for the course GE- STS (Science, Technology, and
Society) intended for you, a student of SDSSU Main campus enrolled in an undergraduate
program. This is the first module for the prelim period. Brief introduction to Science,
Technology and Society are some of the essentials included in this course pack. Considering the
description of the course, this course pack tries to incorporate discussions on the importance of
studying Science, Technology, and Society.
III.
General Instruction
This module begins with an Introduction that encapsulates the topics or lessons that
students of this course have to learn, understand and value. This Module is composed of five
parts of which the first part pertains to the Intended Learning Outcomes (ILOs). The next part is
the course direction where students are directed to focus their respective course works. The
nitty-gritties of the course are also placed in the lecture and discussion which is the third part of
the module. Each student taking this course is also required to answer all the assessment tasks
(refer to tasks and completion time matrix below) to measure whether the student have
learned from the lessons. For the students to grasp all the essentials of the topics covered in a
particular lesson, links, URLs, videos (in USB stick) and other supplementary reading materials
are provided in this module.
Deadline
Midterm
Requirements
Conduct environmental Scanning in the Community on either of the following
Issues and concerns:


Finals
public health and safety
cultural
 societal or environmental considerations
Info Drive on the following Community Issues and Concerns:
 public health and safety
 cultural
 societal or environmental considerations
Through developing any of the following:
pamphlets;
 infographics;
 podcasts;
 Vlogs;
 Blogs;
 Discussion Boards;
 websites
IV.
Academic Integrity
Academic honesty is required of all students. Plagiarism--to take and pass off as one’s
own work, the work or ideas of another--is a form of academic dishonesty. Penalties may be
assigned for any form of academic dishonesty” (See Student Handbook/College Manual).
Sanctions for breaches in academic integrity may include receiving a grade of a “Failed” on a
test or assignment. In addition, the Director of Student Affairs may impose further
administrative sanctions.
V.
Introduction
Science and Technology indeed play
major roles in the everyday life. They make
difficult and complicated tasks easier and
allow people to do more with so little effort
and time. The developments in this field are
not just products of people’s imagination or a
one-time thought process; they are also
brought by gradual improvements to earlier
works from different time periods.
This module discusses the meaning of Science,
Technology and Society; the Historical Antecedents, Transformation of Society by Science and
Technology such as Copernican ,Darwinian Revolution, Freudian Revolution and
Information Revolution.
Lesson 1: Introduction to Science, Technology, and Society
Intended Learning Outcomes
At the end of this module, the students should be able to:
1. discuss the general concepts of Science, Technology and Society and its interactions
throughout the history;
2. identify inventions and discoveries that changed the world over the course of history
and how it transform over the period of time
3. discuss the scientific and technological developments in the Philippines.
1.1.
The Meaning of Science, Technology and Society
What is science?
Science comes from the Latin word scientia, meaning “knowledge”. But in the
perspective of Albert Einstein science is the attempts to make the chaotic diversity of our sense
experience correspond to a logically uniform system of thought. It is also considered a subject
matter of nature. Every physical entity in the extra-terrestrial and terrestrial environment is a
component of nature. According to the famous American science historian, John Heilbron (
2003,p.vii), “ Modern science as a discovery of regularity in nature, enough for natural
phenomena to be described by principles and laws. He also explained that science required
invention to devise techniques, abstractions, apparatuses, and organizations to describe these
natural regularities and their law-like descriptions.
Moreover, Science can be classified as a process and product.
1. Science as a process
a. It seeks for truth about the nature
b. concerned with discovering relationship between observable phenomena in terms
of theories
c. systematized theoretical inquiries
d. it is determined by observation, hypothesis, measurement, analysis and
experimentation
e. it is the description and explanation of the development of knowledge
f. it is the study of the beginning and end of everything that exist
g. conceptualization of new ideas from the abstract to the particular
h. kind of human cultural activity.
2. Science as a product
a. Systematized, organized body of knowledge based on facts or truths observations
b. a set of logical and empirical methods which provide for the systematic observation
of empirical phenomena
c. source of cognitive authority
d. concerned with verifiable concepts
e. a product of the mind
f. it is the variety of knowledge, people, skills organizations, facilities, techniques,
physical resources, methods and technologies that taken together and in relation
with one another.
What is technology?
Basically it is the application of scientific knowledge, laws, and principles to produce
services, materials, tools, and machines aimed at solving real-world problems. It comes from
the Greek root word techne, meaning “art, skill, or cunning of hand”.
On the same view, technology is defined as both a process and a product.
1. Technology as a process
a. It is the application of science
b. the practice, description and terminology of applied sciences
c. the intelligent organization and manipulation of materials for useful purposes
d. the means employed to provide for human needs and wants
e. focused on the inventing new or better tools and materials or new and better ways
of doing things.
f. a way of using findings of science to produce new things for a better way of living
g. search foe concrete solutions that work and give wanted results
h. it is characteristically calculative and imitative, tends to be dangerously manipulative
i. form of human cultural activity.
2. Technology as a product
a. A system of know-how, skills, techniques and processes
b. it is like a language, rituals, values, commerce and arts, it is intrinsic part of a cultural
system and it both shapes and reflects to the system values.
c. it is the product of the scientific concept
d. the complex combination of knowledge, materials and methods
e. material products of human making or fabrication
f. total societal enterprise.
Introduction to Science, Technology and Society
Let us take some very simplistic definitions on the basic concepts of STS in the class.
Science: Hi, I am science. I can investigate of the physical world and its nature including
the people and the stuff we make.
Technology: Hello, I am technology. I can make stuff. Including stuff used in the society,
and in the production and dissemination of science.
Society: Welcome to my world! Actually, I am the sum total of our interactions as
humans, including the interactions that we engage in to figure things out and to make things.
Based on the conversation of STS it is very clear that all of these are deeply
interconnected. As this class proceeds, you will begin to develop a better picture of the
fundamental nature of this interaction.
In this module you will explore the interaction of science, technology and society,
especially in the recent past 20th and 21st centuries.
Science, Technology and Society (STS) is a relatively recent discipline, originating in the
60s and 70s, following Kuhn’s The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962). STS was the result
of a sociological turn in science studies. STS simply stands for science, technology and society. It
is an interdisciplinary field of academic teaching and research, with elements of a social
movement, having as its primary focus the explication and analysis of science and technology as
complex social constructs with attendant societal influences entailing myriad epistemological,
political, and ethical questions.
STS makes the assumption that science and technology are essentially intertwined and
that they are each profoundly social and profoundly political. Basically, science and technology
are both social and political.
Being critical:
In this section, you will try to develop a critical stance towards science and
technology. This does not mean that you are going to cast them in a negative light,
or that you need to develop a dislike for them. Many of us have regarded for
science and technology.
What is critical stance?
A critical stance is the deliberate creation of distance between us and the object you
study. In order to be critical one must step back and ask broad questions.
1. Science claims to produce knowledge about the world. What is the nature of this
knowledge? Is it absolutely certain? Are there other kinds of knowledge?
2. Technology claims to improve our lives. Who are us? What does it mean to have a
better life? What is to be gained and what is to be lost?
Internal and External Perspectives of STS
An internal perspective starts with the principle and assumptions that scientists and
engineers themselves work with and then uses these to try to explain their activities. The
development of an internal perspective requires mastering the details of the science in
question, takes years of hard work to acquire and involves nonverbal assumptions and
practices picked up in this process.
In the external perspective uses a different set of assumptions and attempts to analyse
the context in which experts live and work, as well as what they say. In this perspective you
are interested in the behaviours, goals, rhetoric etc. Also, you analyse the activities of
technical experts without any appeal to the special status of their expertise.
A “classical” view of science and technology
A typical, naïve view of science might be as follows:
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
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Science is a formal activity that creates knowledge by direct interaction with nature.
Science has some kind of special method that allows different scientists to produce
the same kind of knowledge whatever their social and political context might be.
Scientists perform the same experiments in the same way, and agree upon and
reject the same hypotheses.
Scientists come to consensus on the truths of the natural world.
Nature
Science
Truth
The classical view began to fall apart in the process of 20 th century investigations of
scientific activity.
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Philosophers were unable to formalize the “black box”. There appears to be
no single “scientific method”.
When historians began to explore past scientific activities more closely, they
found there was no such thing as “pure science” removed from social and
political interactions and assumptions.
When sociologists began to open the black box of contemporary scientific
activity, they found that the inside was thoroughly social and political.
Then, why do most people still hold the naïve view?
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Scientism
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Scientism goes back at least as far as the Scientific Revolution (c.1550-1700)
and originates in the claim that there is a sharp divide between “ facts” and “
values”.
According to this view, when we do science, we set aside values and study
only facts.
The authority of science rests on its claim to be “value free” and hence
“objective”.
Scientism promotes the idea that all of society’s problem can be solved by
experts who are specially trained to unearth the facts of the matter.
Scientism, and the scientistic movement, make the claim that science is for
the benefit of all humanity
Technologically progressivism

Technological progressivism has its roots in the European Enlightenment (c.
1700-1800), when progress became a synonym for good and technology
came to be seen as a fundamental tool in progressive projects.
Good = Progress
Progress = Technology

Technological progressivism assumes that technological change is inherently
good and sees it as self-propagating, moving by the internal constraints of
technology itself. For example, we view new technologies as progressive and
older ones as old fashioned and use this as a reason for changing
technologies. We advocate the adoption of new technologies with little
reflection on their social impact or the broader question of whether or not
we want those impacts.
Technoscience



In the classical view of the relationship between science and technology,
science leads the way by creating knowledge from nature and technology
follows by following this knowledge to creation of new things.
In this case, you will investigate the complex interaction between science and
technology and the social environments in which they are produced, and
which they, in turn, produce.
The sum total of scientific and technological activities as technoscience.
Technoscience is the combined total of scientific and technological ideas and
activities in their social, political and economic relaities. Nobody has any doubt that
modern society is technoscientific. Modern nation-states and the global economy,itself,
could not function if they were not based on technoscience. Thus, it is impossible to
understand modern society without studying the effects of technoscience.
What makes something social?
Society is the result of people, and institutions interacting with one another. It is a sort
of epiphenomena of these individuals. Society in turn shapes the people and institutions that
form it. Most people experience society as though it were external force acting upon them. The
effects of society operate through the vague mechanism of social norms. Norms tell us what we
should and should not do, what we should and should not think. But they are not rational- or
rather, their rationality is not universal. Norms produce the values that we use in interacting
with others. They produce many of our core ideas- such as ideas of the place of class, the role
gender, meaning of the race, the function of justice, the importance of objectivity, the criterion
of truth, the significance of evidence, etc.
Technoscience is social
In the simplest sense, technoscience is the product of people, and people are social.
But it is possible to claim something much stronger than this:

The social norms of technoscientists affects where they will look, what they will
see and what they will say about it. (Their worldview).
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Technoscientists’ norms are shaped by their discipline (Basic scientific concepts
mean different things in different fields).
Professional norms affect the value that technoscienctists place on judgements.
We find disagreement about what counts as science across time and from place
to place.
The development of technology is highly social, and depends on the
manipulation of social norms.
What makes something political?

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Politics is about control. It is the result of the distribution and utilization of
power in our societies.
Political activity functions by employing various structures, resources and
discourses in order to consolidate and wield power. Political structures are
formal and informal rules to play. Formal rules are things like laws and
procedures, informal rules are things like social norms. There are many kinds of
political resources: natural resources, money, military force, knowledge, access,
charm, etc. Politics uses discourses to control what is sayable and what is not, to
control the way in which something is said and the framework of what is
discussed. Dominant discourses lend a kind of cultural authority.
And so, what do you think is the clear boundary between the social and the political aspects?
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Technoscience is political
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There are formal and informal rules that dictate who can make decisions about
how to proceed with technoscientific work.
Different political structures create different opportunities, at the national level,
the level of institutions, and the level of individuals.
Individual knowledge workers (technoscientists), various institutions, and
different professional groups all use economic and cultural resources to advance
their aims.
Discourses can be developed by appeal to both social and scientific norms. These
discourses can then be used as resources to advance technoscientific work. This
is often referred to as the production of social capital.
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