Thinking longer term about technology: is there value in science fiction-inspired approaches to constructing futures?
‘Science fact, not science fiction’ is an oft-heard refrain in the world of technology assessment and forecasting. Yet, as a literary form, science fiction offers a unique approach to thinking longer term about technology: one grounded in narratives that are people-centric, future-oriented, and focused on non-linear dynamics across the interaction of multiple technologies, value-laden images of future societies, questions of meaning and identity, and enduring symbols and problem framings. Building on this approach, we suggest in this paper that new socio-literary techniques, inspired by science fiction, could offer significant contributions to the governance of new and emerging technologies by improving the capacity to reflexively assess the social dynamics of socio-technical systems. Copyright , Beech Tree Publishing.
Year of publication: |
2008
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Authors: | Miller, Clark A ; Bennett, Ira |
Published in: |
Science and Public Policy. - Oxford University Press, ISSN 0302-3427. - Vol. 35.2008, 8, p. 597-606
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Publisher: |
Oxford University Press |
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