Tracing Concepts: In, Out and Through Computing

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearch

Standard

Tracing Concepts: In, Out and Through Computing. / Romic, Nenad; Gardner, Edwin.
In: Volume, No. 28, 15.07.2011, p. 1-24.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearch

Harvard

Romic, N & Gardner, E 2011, 'Tracing Concepts: In, Out and Through Computing', Volume, no. 28, pp. 1-24.

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{65f06df1a0ad4231b4cc5814a512de37,
title = "Tracing Concepts: In, Out and Through Computing",
abstract = "The arrival of the computer has produced a new knowledge field that was especially hungry for, and prolific in, concepts. Since computing is embedding itself ever deeper in the fabric of reality through a pervasive network of connected, communicating and sensing objects, it is worthwhile to trace and characterize the concepts going in, out and through computing from the fields of architecture and philosophy. This is exactly what the Tracing Concepts project deals with. The artificial environment of the computer is a place where particularly abstract concepts find fertile ground. Since “software is perhaps the ultimate heterogeneous technology[, i]t exists simultaneously as an idea, language, technology, and practice” (Nathan Ensmenger). In a very real way, a concept is literally put to work in a programming language, they become operative, mechanical cogs in the machinery of the Universal Machine.While degrees, titles, institutes and schools constitute disciplinary boundaries and define professions, the ideas and concepts that circulate in a discipline are much more difficult, if not impossible, to cage. Ideas are borrowed and appropriated from one field to another. When adopted in new contexts concepts are mutated, bastardized and are re-utilized and, more often than not, depoliticized. ",
keywords = "Digital media",
author = "Nenad Romic and Edwin Gardner",
year = "2011",
month = jul,
day = "15",
language = "English",
pages = "1--24",
journal = "Volume",
issn = "1574-9401",
publisher = "Archis Foundation",
number = "28",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Tracing Concepts

T2 - In, Out and Through Computing

AU - Romic, Nenad

AU - Gardner, Edwin

PY - 2011/7/15

Y1 - 2011/7/15

N2 - The arrival of the computer has produced a new knowledge field that was especially hungry for, and prolific in, concepts. Since computing is embedding itself ever deeper in the fabric of reality through a pervasive network of connected, communicating and sensing objects, it is worthwhile to trace and characterize the concepts going in, out and through computing from the fields of architecture and philosophy. This is exactly what the Tracing Concepts project deals with. The artificial environment of the computer is a place where particularly abstract concepts find fertile ground. Since “software is perhaps the ultimate heterogeneous technology[, i]t exists simultaneously as an idea, language, technology, and practice” (Nathan Ensmenger). In a very real way, a concept is literally put to work in a programming language, they become operative, mechanical cogs in the machinery of the Universal Machine.While degrees, titles, institutes and schools constitute disciplinary boundaries and define professions, the ideas and concepts that circulate in a discipline are much more difficult, if not impossible, to cage. Ideas are borrowed and appropriated from one field to another. When adopted in new contexts concepts are mutated, bastardized and are re-utilized and, more often than not, depoliticized.

AB - The arrival of the computer has produced a new knowledge field that was especially hungry for, and prolific in, concepts. Since computing is embedding itself ever deeper in the fabric of reality through a pervasive network of connected, communicating and sensing objects, it is worthwhile to trace and characterize the concepts going in, out and through computing from the fields of architecture and philosophy. This is exactly what the Tracing Concepts project deals with. The artificial environment of the computer is a place where particularly abstract concepts find fertile ground. Since “software is perhaps the ultimate heterogeneous technology[, i]t exists simultaneously as an idea, language, technology, and practice” (Nathan Ensmenger). In a very real way, a concept is literally put to work in a programming language, they become operative, mechanical cogs in the machinery of the Universal Machine.While degrees, titles, institutes and schools constitute disciplinary boundaries and define professions, the ideas and concepts that circulate in a discipline are much more difficult, if not impossible, to cage. Ideas are borrowed and appropriated from one field to another. When adopted in new contexts concepts are mutated, bastardized and are re-utilized and, more often than not, depoliticized.

KW - Digital media

UR - https://www.scribd.com/doc/83101163/Tracing-Concepts-Volume-Issue-28

M3 - Journal articles

SP - 1

EP - 24

JO - Volume

JF - Volume

SN - 1574-9401

IS - 28

ER -