Only rarely, if indeed ever, are a tool and an altogether original job
it is to do, invented together. Tools as symbols, however, invite their
imaginative displacements into other than their original contexts. In
their new frames of reference, that is, as new symbols in an already
established imaginative calculus, they may themselves be transformed,
and may even transform the originally prescriptive calculus. These
transformations may, in turn, create entirely new problems which then
engender the invention of hitherto literally unimaginable tools
Joseph Weizenbaum. Computer power and human reason: from judgment to
calculation. MIT, 1976