Abstract
In 1985, Melvin Kranzberg, at the time president of SHOT – Society for the History of Technology, summarised his three-decade long work around the relevance of context and human agency for technological implementation and development in six general principles that later became known as Kranzberg’s Laws. His reflections became very important and useful for the communities of historians and philosophers of technology, in the sense that they analyse critically the nature of technological systems and artefacts, their historical influence in society, and the entangled relationship between technologists, users, and the sociocultural contexts that surrounds them. In this chapter, I use Kranzberg’s Laws to analyse the historical evolution of the Portuguese railway system, since its inception in the 1850s to the current challenges faced by Portuguese policymakers. I offer that Kranzberg’s teachings are crucial to illustrate how the construction of railways in Portugal was a very much human activity, which contributes not only to understanding the past but also to face current challenges and problems.