- Low-technology
The term "low-technology" is a description of those
crafts andtool s whose inception (typically) predates theIndustrial Revolution .A test for low-technology may be that it can be practiced or fabricated with a minimum of
Capital investment by an individual or small group of individuals; and that the knowledge of the practice can be completely comprehended by a single individual, free from increasingspecialization andcompartmentalization .Colloquially, low-technology (or lo-tech - an antonym of
hi-tech ) has also come to be used as a relative description of more modern techniques and designs to show that they are no longercutting edge . Generally such techniques and designs fall into disuse due to their inferiority.Examples of Low-technology
Note: almost all of the entries in this section should be prefixed by the word "traditional".
*
weaving produced on non-automatedlooms , andbasketry .* hand
wood-working ,joinery ,coopering , andcarpentry .* the trade of the ship-wright.
* the trade of the wheel-wright.
* the trade of the
wainwright : making wagons. (the Latin word for a two-wheeled "wagon" is "carpentum", the maker of which was a "carpenter".)("Wright" is the
agent form of the word "wrought", which itself is the originalpast passive participle of the word "work", now superseded by theweak verb forms "worker" and "worked" respectively.)*
blacksmithing and the various relatedsmithing and metal-crafts.*
folk music played onacoustic instruments .*
organic farming andanimal husbandry (ie; agriculture as practiced by all American farmers prior to World War II).*
milling in the sense of operating hand-constructed equipment with the intent to either grind grain, or the reduction of timber to lumber as practiced in asaw-mill .*
fulling cloth preparing.* the production of
charcoal by the collier, for use inhome heating ,foundry operations,smelting , the varioussmithing trades, and for brushing ones teeth inColonial America .*
glass-blowing .* various subskills of
food preservation :
** smoking
**salting
**pickling
** dryingNote:
home-canning is a counter example of a Low-technology since some of the supplies needed to pursue this skill rely on aglobal trade network and an existing manufacturinginfrastructure .Fact|date=June 2007* the production of various
alcoholic beverage s:
**wine : not quite so well preserved fruit juice.
**beer : a way to preserve the calories of grain products from decay.
**whiskey : an improved (distilled ) form of beer.*
flint-knapping *
masonry as used incastles ,cathedrals , androot cellar s.the Legal Status of Low-technology
* By Federal law in the United States, only those articles produced with little or no use of machinery or tools with complex mechanisms may be stamped with the designation "hand-wrought" or "hand-made".
* Lengthy court-battles are currently underway over the precise definition of the terms "organic" and "natural" as applied to
foodstuff s.Groups associated with Low-technology
* the
Arts and Crafts Movement , popularized byGustav Stickley in America around 1900.* the corresponding
Bauhaus movement of Germany around the same time.* the
Do-It-Yourself phenomenon arising in America followingWorld War II .* the
Homesteading Movement beginning in America during the 1960's, whose adherents sought to get "Back to the Land."*
Survivalists are often proponents, since Low technology is inherently morerobust than itshigh-technology counter-part.* most pejoratively, the
Luddites , whose activities date to the very beginning of theIndustrial Revolution .* the various Living History Museums and
Open air museum s around the world, which strive to recreate bygone societies.* the
Amish and to a lesser extent some sects of theMennonites , who specifically refuse some newer technologies to avoid deleterious effects on their societies.
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