Difference between revisions of "Convivial Tools"

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(See also: Thematic Topics)
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''Convivial Tools'' can be defined as tools which allow the user to operate with independent efficiency. The term was coined by [[Ivan Illich]] in his book [[Tools for Conviviality]] (1973). However, the [[Historical Roots]] of the idea of Convivial Tools go back at least to [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau]]. Also, [[Ivan Illich]] built upon the ideas which the [[Appropriate Technology]] and [[Whole Earth]] movements had developed in the late nineteen-sixties, a few years ''before'' the publication of Illich's [[Tools for Conviviality]].
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''Convivial Tools'' can be defined as tools which allow the user to operate with independent efficiency, and with minimal reliance on external expertise. The term applies in particular to tools that are developed and maintained by the commmunity that uses them.  
  
The term Convivial Tools applies in particular to tools that are developed and maintained by the commmunity that uses them. Thus each of the thematic topics presented on this website (see below) illustrates, in its own way, the idea of "Convivial Tools."
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The concept of ''Convivial Tools'' was developed by [[Ivan Illich]] in his book [[Tools for Conviviality]] (1973). Illich was a major thinker of what was called the Counter-Culture. He built upon ideas formulated by the [[Appropriate Technology]] and [[Whole Earth]] movements in the late nineteen-sixties, which in turn had [[Historical Roots]] going back to the naturalism of [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau]], and to eighteenth and ninetheenth century critiques of industrial society.
  
==See also: Thematic Topics==
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Each of the thematic topics presented on this website illustrates, in its own way, the idea of "Convivial Tools." For example the [[Hacker Generation]] that invented the personal computer in the nineteen-seventies was a prime example of a community that itself developed the tools that they themselves used, as are the more recent [[FOSS|Free and Open Source Software]] movements. The participatory culture of the [[Web 2.0]] is the latest manifestation of a tendancy towards increased control of users over their tools, reversing the long historical trend of personal loss of control over the complex machinery of industrial society.
*[[:Category:Historical Roots]] -- history of the ideas underlying Convivial Tools
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*[[:Category:Post-War Cybernetics]] -- the post-war scientists who developed [[Cybernetics]]
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*[[:Category:Whole Earth]] -- the [[Whole Earth Catalog]] and its off-shoots
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*[[:Category:Appropriate Technology]] -- [[E.F. Schumacher]] and [[Small is Beautiful]]
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*[[:Category:Convivial Tools]] -- the convivial philosophy of [[Ivan Illich]]
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*[[:Category:Hacker Generation]] -- the developers of the personal computer in the nineteen-seventies
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*[[:Category:FOSS]] -- the Free and Open Source Software movements
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*[[:Category:Wikis]] -- the world of [[Wiki]]s
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*[[:Category:Open Design]] -- the open source design of physical tools and machines
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*[[:Category:Convivial Product]] -- the [[Convivial Tool]] as a product offered for public use
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==Links==
 
==Links==

Revision as of 21:12, 11 January 2009