sinnvol
Sinnvol is a theoretical concept used in philosophy, design, and policy discourse to describe the quality of an artifact, action, or program that is meaningful and practically useful. The term is often framed as a safeguard against purely aesthetic or technically perfect solutions that fail to meet real human needs. In practice, Sinnvol is assessed along two central dimensions: cognitive meaning (alignment with values and goals) and instrumental usefulness (ability to solve problems).
The term originated as a neologism in late 2010s online debates about meaningful design and social impact.
A common framework evaluates Sinnvol with criteria such as relevance to stakeholders, expected impact, feasibility, transparency,
Applications span product design, education, public policy, and community programs. In product design, Sinnvol guides feature
Critics argue that Sinnvol can be vague and subjective, inviting cultural bias or instrumental manipulation. Proponents
An illustrative example is a community health app redesigned to improve adherence by aligning reminders with