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CONCEPT

Same Technology, Different Institutions, Different Worlds

White's defense against the charge of technological determinism: the same technology, deployed into different institutional contexts, produces different social outcomes — because institutions, not tools, determine who captures the gains and who bears the costs.
The horse collar increased agricultural productivity everywhere it was adopted — that was a function of equine anatomy, not social organization. But the social consequences of the productivity gain varied dramatically with institutional context. In regions of northern France where manorial authority was strong, the gains were captured by the lord; the hierarchy intensified without structural change. In regions of Germany and the Low Countries where peasant communities had greater autonomy, the gains were captured by the communities themselves; villages grew, markets developed, the peasant class acquired economic independence. The technology was identical. The institutions were different. The social outcomes diverged. The pattern is general: technologies create conditions, but institutions determine outcomes.
Same Technology, Different Institutions, Different Worlds
Same Technology, Different Institutions, Different Worlds

In The You On AI Field Guide

The concept is developed in chapter seven of this volume as White's most important analytical contribution against both technological determinism and technological neutrality. Technologies are not neutral — they create gradients of advantage

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