Human-centered in a sentence as an adjective

OP seems to have conflated taking a "human-centered" approach with a "feminist" approach.

Some instead some could follow Kant's idea of treating humans solely as ends, never as means, a sort of human-centered chauvinism or "humanism".

Perhaps instead some could follow Kant's idea of treating humans solely as ends, never as means, a sort of human-centered chauvinism or "humanism".

How about the fact that the OP has mentioned at least on 3 different occasions in the article that she was taking the feminist "AKA" human-centered approach to solving the problem.

This constant reinforcement in the article about taking the "human" point of view leads me to believe that OP's perception of non-feminists is that they're in the camp of people more likely to take a "non-human-centered" approach.

Knowing the exact surface area each control will take up, the exact distance between elements as they will appear in the real world, gives the designer that much greater degree of precision in crafting a human-centered UI.

Human-centered definitions

adjective

marked by humanistic values and devotion to human welfare; "a humane physician"; "released the prisoner for humanitarian reasons"; "respect and humanistic regard for all members of our species"

See also: human-centred humanist humanistic humanitarian