Emotional Drivers of Innovation
Exploring the Moral Economy of Prototypes
Abstract
Innovation is ubiquitous and has become a universal term that is indispensable to describe interventions, projects, or products. Franziska Sörgel argues that emotions influence innovations as they are inherent in initial ideas, expectations and habitual evaluation criteria that impact the development process. Instead of assuming that the innovation process is subject to rational and linear creativity, the study adopts the notion of ›moral economies‹ by Lorraine Daston as a space for negotiation. Such an approach enables decision-makers to question the evaluation criteria and patterns for technological developments before implementing them in society.
Keywords
Innovation; Emotion; Technology; Moral; Economy; Science; Sociology of Technology; Sociology of Science; Cultural Anthropology; SociologyDOI
10.14361/9783839471470ISBN
9783839471470, 9783837671476, 9783839471470Publisher
transcript VerlagPublisher website
https://www.transcript-verlag.de/Publication date and place
Bielefeld, 2024Series
Science Studies,Classification
Impact of science and technology on society
Social and cultural anthropology