@impactology bad things happen when you try to apply technical solutions to social problems or social solutions to technical problems.
The two worlds really don't engage cleanly.
@volkris I think you have misunderstood my intent. Its not application of tech to solve a social problem but rather establishing a set of values while engaging in a profession/vocation as human beings.
@impactology even so, I would caution against that kind of thing in any domain that doesn't directly involve politics.
You get into messy issues of, well there's a bug in this MRI machine that needs to be patched, but the developer thinks his boss is contributing to authoritarianism, so he's refusing to work, and the end users impacted by the bug are just screwed.
You get into conflicts of interest pretty quickly when you start asking people to function outside thelr positions like that.
@volkris I am not talking about interpersonal behaviour here but rather org structures, larger social structures. Something like worker coops for example and the way they are run.
this paper might be useful
What is a (social) structural explanation? by Sally Haslanger
This paper offers a way of thinking about structural explanation & sketches an account of social structure that connects social structures with structural
explanation
https://dspace.mit.edu/bitstream/handle/1721.1/97040/HaslangerWISSE-FINAL.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y