I am fascinated by the idea of “the underlying sociological and cultural factors” that go into the way a sociocultural group engages in the task of engineering (within this context: the scientific approach to problem-solving).

I realize this is a poor explanation, but an example of the phenomenon should be able to clarify what I attempt to describe. The underlying structure of the thought process behind how the Russian conception of war resulted in divergent, yet ultimately superior tank design. The cultural influence on the way tools that fill a universal need are themselves constructed. Like how western saws cut on the pushstroke, but eastern ones on the pullstroke. the saw is almost the same, and exists to serve a shared need for a tool. yet the simplest thing diverges completely.

  • 7bicycles [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    2 years ago

    There is, at least in german, quite a lot of articles and information for eastern german designer Christa Petroff-Bohne. It tends to be more on the biographical side, but she herself did talk a lot about her thoughts on designing things, the most famous ones I think is cutlery, plates and such. I always thought that was quite fascinating, maybe you can DeepL some stuff or ask around if someone’d be willing to translate?