Definitions
Examples
Application
Facts
Anything Goes
200

How does Arnulf Grubler define technology hardware?

Manufactured objects like tools that enhance human performance, or enable humans to perform tasks they could not perform otherwise

(Grubler, p. 21)

200

Give one example we discussed in class of why global temperature matters

Extreme temperatures

Drought

Extreme precipitation, floods

Water availability

Biodiversity, ecosystems, and extinction

Sea level

Human impacts (disease, food security, heat-related illness)

200

Identify one direct cost of installing new solar panels at Eckerd

Expenses directly related to the production or development of a product or service

Labor costs, manufacturing costs, materials costs, etc.

(Various acceptable answers)

200

According to the National Science Foundation, what source provides the greatest amount of funding for basic research?

Federal Government

200

Define "environmental change"

A change or disturbance of environment through natural ecological processes

(Johnson et al, 1997)

400

Define "stakeholders"

Persons and groups that affect, or are affected by, and organization’s decisions, policies, and operations

(Lawrence and Weber, 2008)

400

Identify one reason why global energy consumption is increasing

Economic Development (agriculture, industry, transportation)

Rising Population (10,000,000,000 by 2058, U.N. projection)

Technology (increasingly powerful technologies require greater energy inputs)

400

Identify two groups or organizations who are stakeholders in the Eckerd College Community Farm

Students, faculty, dining services (Bon Appetit), College administration, etc.

(Various answers)

400

Technology evolution is defined by these four characteristics

Uncertainty:  Prevails at all stages of technological evolution, from initial design choices, through success or failure in the marketplace, to eventual environmental impacts and spin-off effects 

Dynamic:  Technology keeps changing all the time

Systemic: Technology is not a discrete, isolated event that concerns only one artifact. It requires a whole host of other technologies 

Cumulative: Changes build on previous experience and knowledge 

400

Joseph Schumpeter identified these three phases of technology development

Invention: The first demonstration of the principal, physical feasibility of a proposed new solution

Innovation: The point when a newly discovered material (hardware) or a newly developed technique (software) is being put into regular production for the first time, or when an organized market for the new product is first created

Diffusion: The widespread replication of a technology and its assimilation in a socioeconomic setting

600

What are opportunity costs?

Lost benefits, or opportunities, that arise when a business pursues one product or strategy over another

600

According to Grubler, technology "software" refers to know-how, human knowledge, and skills - the “knowledge base” of hardware.  What is one example of software?

How to drive a car

Use of a computer

Mathematics to build buildings and rocket ships

600

Name two benefits and two threats associated with synthetic farming

Benefits: increased yield, pest resistance, less water required, etc.

Threats: altering local ecosystem, challenges with GMOs, unknown consequences of new farming methods, etc.

(Various Answers)

600

What proportion of the world's energy currently comes from nuclear and renewable sources?

18%

(Energy Institute Statistical Review of World Energy, 2023)

600

Stakeholders can exercise four types of power.  What are they?

Voting power, economic power, political power, legal power

(Lawrence and Weber, 2008)

800

According to the U.S. Energy Information Association, energy is defined as what?

The ability to do work

800

Give one example of technology substitution that we discussed in class

Cars as a substitute for horses

800

Dr. Emily Yeh identified three approaches to dealing with climate change.  One is mitigation.  What are the other two?

Adaptation

Loss and Damage

800

Among the world's top contributors to climate change, twenty companies are responsible for roughly what percent of the world's cumulative CO2 emissions?

35%, or roughly one-third

(The Guardian, via Dr. Emily Yeh)

800

What is the Gaia Hypothesis?

All living things on earth (the biosphere) function as one super-organism that changes its environment to create conditions that best meet its needs, with the ability to self-regulate critical systems needed to sustain life

(James Lovelock, 1979)

1000

Complete this definition:  "A natural environment is one relatively _____ or ______ by human culture"

Unchanged or Undisturbed

(Johnson et al., 1997)

1000

Imagine going for a walk in the woods.  Give one example of an activity or action that you might engage in that is natural, and one that is nonnatural

"We humans as an organic species are natural, but the environmental effects of our unique, rapidly evolved, advanced, and artificial culture are not.

By this reasoning, if one urinates in woods it is natural, but if one  chops down the woods with an ax, or burns the woods with a match, lighter, rubbing sticks, or other technology, it is nonnatural"

(Johnson et al, 1997)

1000

DAILY DOUBLE

In the next four minutes, conduct a cost-benefit analysis of nuclear power, including all four categories of costs and benefits we discussed in class

Costs: Direct, indirect, intangible, opportunity

Benefits: Direct, indirect, intangible, competitive

(Various Answers)

1000

The most efficient solar cells to date convert about what percent of sunlight into electricity?

46%

(Richard Komp, TEDx)

1000

What is meant by the term "climate justice?"

Climate justice refers the problem that nations and actors who contribute the least to anthropogenic climate change are those who suffer the greatest consequences