Published June 30, 2026 | Version v1.0

True Technological Understanding (TTU) v1.0

Description

True Technological Understanding (TTU) is a framework for designing technological systems that preserve uncertainty, evaluate context, manage plurality, and remain accountable to consequence through structured governance.

TTU develops from the conceptual foundations established within the Conceptual Model of Understanding (CMU) and the structural relations described within the True Understanding Invariant Structural Framework (TU-ISF). Its purpose is not to replace existing approaches to artificial intelligence, decision-support systems, or computational modelling. Rather, it explores how technological systems might be designed when understanding, uncertainty, context, and consequence are treated as central considerations rather than secondary concerns.

Many contemporary systems are optimised for prediction, classification, recommendation, or answer generation. TTU does not reject these capabilities. Instead, it asks whether technological systems may benefit from additional structures that preserve uncertainty where commitment cannot yet be justified, support contextual evaluation, manage plurality where appropriate, and remain accountable to consequence through structured governance.

TTU should be understood as a framework for technological design rather than a specific product, model, implementation, or operational system. This document introduces its purpose, scope, limitations, and foundational orientation. More specialised architectural, governance, and implementation discussions are developed through companion papers, demonstration work, and future research.

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Additional details

Related works

Is derived from
Preprint: 10.5281/zenodo.20672505 (DOI)
Preprint: 10.5281/zenodo.20707339 (DOI)

Dates

Other
2026-06-30
Date of public release.

References

  • Ashby, W. R. (1956). An Introduction to Cybernetics. Chapman & Hall. Capra, F. (1996). The Web of Life: A New Scientific Understanding of Living Systems. Anchor Books. Deutsch, D. (1997). The Fabric of Reality. Allen Lane. Deutsch, D. (2011). The Beginning of Infinity: Explanations That Transform the World. Viking. Hofstadter, D. R. (1979). Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid. Basic Books. Kahneman, D. (2011). Thinking, Fast and Slow. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Kuhn, T. S. (1970). The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (2nd ed.). University of Chicago Press. Lawson, H. (2001). Closure: A Story of Everything. Routledge. Popper, K. R. (1945). The Open Society and Its Enemies. Routledge. Wiener, N. (1948). Cybernetics: Or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine. MIT Press.