How Then Shall We Work: Should Christian Engineers Pursue Productivity?

About How Then Shall We Work: Should Christian Engineers Pursue Productivity?

Authors Frisch, Kayt; Foster, Mike; Vander Werff, Justin
Date 2022
Proceedings Proceedings of the 2022 Christian Engineering Conference
Place University of Northwestern u2013 St. Paul, Minnesota
Vol / Pages pp. 140-147
URL https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Zk6JxgxfFbPtrNm5pL_82KqepHiWG0Re/view

Type: Conference Paper

Tags: Christian Engineering

Abstract

Technology critics like Neal Postman (Amusing Ourselves to Death) and Nicholas Carr (The Shallows) have long held forth that our technology shapes us. In recent years, philosophers (including some that have presented at past Christian Engineering Conferences) have explored the value-ladenness of engineering design and how the biases in our technology affect us on a daily basis. A “hidden in plain sight” technology that we interact with everyday is our approach to getting things done, or our “productivity system.” While everyone has a productivity system, that is, a way of organizing, prioritizing, and executing tasks, some have thought more explicitly about their system than others. Author Cal Newport has popularized a time management system consisting of phases for Capture, Configure, and Control, as well as planning at different timescales. This productivity approach provides knowledge workers with the tools to get more things done in less time. The engineering design norms have provided a useful framework for considering the non-neutrality of technology. We apply them to evaluate the Capture, Configure, Control productivity system and consider whether Christians should buy into the notion of productivity in general and this system in particular.