Instrumentalization

A key concept in Feenberg critical theory of technology, is to make technology a key part of critical theoretical analysis and concerns, and to consider where democratic rationalization can take place.

His attempt to do so revolves around a splitting of the social and technical, and their relative intertwining, into the primary instrumentalization and secondary instrumentalizations of technology. It is the processes across these two that are the essence (now) of technology Kirkpatrick 2020 p. 126

Generally speaking, primary instrumentalization (also considered to be functionalism) is the reification of technology from its initial development and use in one or more places, which allows it to move elsewhere, through two objectifying moments:

And two subjectivation moments:

Secondary instrumentalization (sometimes concretisation and realisation) involves two aspects of “the objective life of technical artifacts” Kirkpatrick 2020, 127:

And their relation to humans {didn’t the other two also imply this?}

It is at this intersection across PI and SI that “technology is underdetermined”, and hence ambivalent and open to influence and change. The problem is when new technology in the end, despite this underdetermination, reinforces existing power and social relations. In Feenberg’s

This is effectively his way to address some middle ground between essentialist and substantive views of technology, and the resulting dystopian negative critiques of technology from some of the key Frankfurt School critical theorists, and the lack of criticality in instrumental approaches to technology and social construction approaches, which both fail to questions the narrowing of interests and effects through technology.

It is the ability to intervene in the inherent ambivalent