Monday, June 23, 2014

Blog 2: Vast Machines

Vast Machines: Thinking Globally

            Thinking Globally, a chapter in the book Vast Machines, written by Paul Edwards discusses the concept of knowledge and how we know what we know. To premise the discussion of the concept of knowledge the chapter begins by explaining the concept of climate change.  The example of climate change puts the thoughts of Edwards into context and how one uses technology and the process of data collection to discuss how one uses information to explain ideas as well as how one conveys ideas to others.  The purpose of the chapter is to explain how the world is becoming one system of information and how this information is interconnected.  Since the information is interconnected it creates an infrastructure that creates a stable foundation that the modern social world depends upon. In order to think globally, one must not only gather information but also convey the information to the public in a way that makes the information relevant and important. 
            The chapter discusses the process of knowledge formation in a sociotechnical system and answers the question of how do we know what we know.  To begin, the definition of sociotechnical system is a knowledge infrastructure comprised of robust networks of people, artifacts, and institutions that generate, share, and maintain specific knowledge about the human and natural worlds  (Edwards, 2010, p.17).  In order for information to be relevant and important, it must fit into an institution that shares and maintains specific knowledge.  For example, in the climate change context, the information is only as important as how well the information is conveyed to networks of people and institutions that share that knowledge.  In return the sociotechnical system answers the question of how do we know what we know.  The sociotechnical system describes the way in which people are convinced that things are true, useful, and consistent with other things they already know (Edwards, 2010, p. 17).  The use of the sociotechnical system ensures that people are aware of information.  It creates a system in which the information is shared and conveyed to the public in a way that makes it important and able to be conveyed.  The article suggested that the system of sharing information involves using instruments, such as a computer, to gather data.  Then in order to publish the data, one must use the Internet to convince people that the information that you are conveying is true and useful.  The sociotechnical system allows one to give the community a way to understand what you have found and convey to them what you think the information you found means (Edwards, 2010, 17).       
            The concept of “vast machine” and knowledge infrastructure is discussed in the chapter as well.  Vast machine is described as a machine that has infrastructures that are entangled into what makes the machine.  Infrastructures are basic systems and services that are reliable, standardized, and widely accessible, at least within a community (Edwards, 2010, p.8).  Infrastructures exhibit the following features: embeddedness, transparency, reach, learned as part of membership, links with conventions of practice, embodiment of standards, built on an installed base, becomes visible upon breakdown, fixed in a modular increments (Edwards, 2010, p.9).  In the 1980s, historians and sociologists of technology began studying the infrastructure phenomenon intensively (Edwards, 2010, p.9).  The researchers developed the theory of large technical systems (LTS) that apply to telephones and railroads (Edwards, 2010, p.9).  The LTS approach identified a series of common stages in infrastructure development: invention, development, technology transfer, consolidation, splintering, and decline (Edwards, 2010, p.10).  The stages of infrastructure and the theory of an infrastructure alludes to the concept that in order for information to be exchanged it must have an infrastructure that is made up of systems, many of which are technology systems.  In order to have information flow, the chapter discusses the concept of sharing information and building an infrastructure of interrelated systems where exchange of information is completed.  Infrastructures are said to be where information is produced, communicated, stored, and maintained.  
            The chapter also discusses that the basis of scientific knowledge and how that scientific knowledge depends on a few things.  In order to create and maintain scientific knowledge, one needs the following things: enduring communities with shared standards, enduring organizations, mathematics, conventions and laws, theories, physical facilities, and support staff (Edwards, 2010, p. 17).  If scientific knowledge is to be distributed to individuals, then someone must not only create the information but the information needs to be able to be exchanged.  In order for the information to be exchanged, it must have a community to belong to in an organization that engulfs that community.  Scientific knowledge is special in its own aspect because it has its own specialized vocabulary and laws that apply to the information.  
            Finally, the chapter discusses the concept of globalist information.  The chapter began by stating that President Johnson sent out a picture of the Earth to all of the world leaders to show how fragile the world was as well as to show how interconnected everyone is in the world (Edwards, 2010, p.1).  The concept of globalist information arises from this action.  The concept refers to systems and institutions for transmitting information about the world as a whole (Edwards, 2010, p.23).  This concept builds on the fact that the world is interconnected and the share of information is important for the world to function.  The chapter states that the best globalist system for exchanging information is in the meteorology department (Edwards, 2010, p.24).  The chapter discusses that in order for the world to learn more about climate change, everyone needs to exchange information on the subject. 
            Thinking Globally suggests, through the climate change context, there is a growing amount of information that is being produced.  The article discusses how information is exchanged, how people perceive information, and how there is a call for information exchange to better serve the public.  Considering the plethora of information that is being produced on a daily basis throughout the scientific community as well as other data producing fields, there is a need for information sharing in the world.  The chapter explains that information is important and can be organized into infrastructure which in turn can be used by everyone to make the world a better place by having an idea about what is going on in the world.


Edwards, Paul N. (2004). Thinking Globally. A Vast Machine: Computer Models, Climate Data, and the Politics of Global Warming, p.1-25.  

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