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The technological society

New York,: Knopf (1964)

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  1. Technology as excuse for questionable ethics.Abbe Mowshowitz - 2008 - AI and Society 22 (3):271-282.
    By endowing technology with the attributes of autonomous agency, human beings are ethically sidelined. Individuals are relieved of responsibility. The suggestion of being in the grip of irresistible forces provides an excuse for rejecting responsibility for oneself and others, thus creating conditions for inappropriate or antisocial behavior. It also impedes the search for solutions to pressing social problems associated with applications of technology. Failure to assign and accept responsibility for decisions to deploy “conventional” technology will inevitably impede our ability to (...)
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  • Ambivalence to Technology in Jeunet’s Le Fabuleux Destin d’Amélie Poulain.Rick Clifton Moore - 2006 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 26 (1):9-19.
    Although at one level Jean-Pierre Jeunet’s Le Fabuleux Destin d’Amélie Poulain is a sweet, attractive film about a young Parisian doing good deeds, it also offers a compelling analysis of the role of technology in our modern lives. The film paints a world where machines and a mechanistic worldview are appealing because humans have a desire to control their destinies but threatening because humans value freedom. The work of French social theorist Jacques Ellul is especially useful in analyzing these facets (...)
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  • Nuclear Power and Technological Authoritarianism.Steven M. Hoffman & John Byrne - 1987 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 7 (5-6):658-671.
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  • Laudato Si’, Technologies of Power and Environmental Injustice: Toward an Eco-Politics Guided by Contemplation.Jessica Ludescher Imanaka - 2018 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 31 (6):677-701.
    This paper explores how Pope Francis’ critique of “the technocratic paradigm” in Laudato Si’ can contribute to an environmental ethics governed by asymmetries of power and agency. The technocratic paradigm is here theorized as linked to forms of anthropocentrism that together engender a dangerous alliance between the powers of technology and technologies of power. The meaning and import of this view become clearer when the background of these ideas gets excavated in the works of Romano Guardini. The contemporary manifestation of (...)
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  • A Symposium on the Relevance of Michael Polanyi’s Insights to a Reformulated Understanding of Science, Technology, and Society.Walter B. Mead - 2011 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 31 (3):155-159.
    This is intended as an introductory statement to the explorations undertaken in the essays that follow. The authors of these essays attempt to introduce the reader to some of the insights of Michael Polanyi and their implications for the reader who wishes to come to a greater understanding of modern technological society, which — for better or worse — has come to define his very existence. Arguably, no twentieth-century thinker has probed more deeply than Polanyi into the dynamics of scientific (...)
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  • Multimedia Knowledge and Culture Production: On the Possibility of a Critical and Ethical Pedagogy Resulting From the Current Push for Technology in the Classroom.David S. McCurry - 2000 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 20 (2):100-105.
    Demands for standardization and accountability as systemic cures for perceived ills in the education system are paralleled by a public and private sector promotion of technology integration as one pedagogical solution. The general critique of education and of technology in society has developed as two related yet separate threads in critical inquiry and discussion. As electronic forms of media and communication are becoming pervasive in society in general, solutions to long-standing educational dilemmas that mirror problems in society at large need (...)
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  • Information Technology and the Language of Education.Maggie McBride & Kathryn Ross Wayne - 1998 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 18 (5):365-373.
    In this article, the authors explore the interaction of language and culture through a metaphorical analysis of the ideas written of in Gregory Stock's book, Metaman, as well as explain how education shares the implicit assumptions of Metaman, thus perpetuating and strengthening a modern-day discourse that embeds a technological manifest destiny enveloped in deficiency as a guiding metaphor.
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  • Elements of an Alternative to Nuclear Power as a Response to the Energy-Environment Crisis in India: Development as Freedom and a Sustainable Energy Utility.Manu V. Mathai - 2009 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 29 (2):139-150.
    Even as the conventional energy system is fundamentally challenged by the “energy-environment crisis,” its adherents have presented the prospect of “abundant” and purportedly “green” nuclear power as part of a strategy to address the crisis. Surveying the development of nuclear power in India, this article finds that it is predisposed to centralization and secrecy, that nuclear power as energy policy is based on a presumption that overabundance is imperative for viable forms of social and economic development; its institutionalization has tended (...)
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  • The Doctrine of Creation and Some Implications for Modern Economics.David Lim - 1990 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 7 (3):21-23.
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  • Artificial Knowledge: Assembling and Automating Parametric Epistemic Things : Beyond Endurance Model.Magnus Larsson - unknown
    A parallel reading of ten powerful works of conceptual and analytical originality yields a novel epistemological method based on the possibility of automated experimentation in engineering and architecture. An initial protocol for Parametric Epistemic Things, a particular kind of assemblage (as postulated by DeLanda following Deleuze & Guattari) that builds on Rheinberger’s ideas of Epistemic Things, is outlined and conceptualised to allow for the possibility of such automation. Following the interpretations of fragments from the texts, a discussion examines future potentials (...)
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  • The necessity of art in education.Jacob Landau - 1985 - World Futures 21 (1):29-51.
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  • Created Co-creator, a Theory of Human Becoming in an Era of Science and Technology.Ahenkora Siaw Kwakye - 2020 - Scientia et Fides 8 (2):285-305.
    Scientific discoveries and the emergence of cosmological theories such as the Big Bang Theory and evolution have challenged the Christian doctrine of creation and its reliability on many fronts, because the discoveries appear to contradict the Christian account as to how creation unfolded. Hefner sees the situation as an additional interpretative task to theologians. He, however, posits that scientific discoveries are an opportunity to communicate the Christian message through social and scientific experience to bring meaning to broader society. He expresses (...)
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  • Technology and History: "Kranzberg's Laws".Melvin Kranzberg - 1995 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 15 (1):5-13.
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  • American Higher Education, the De-Worlding of World, and the Lessons of Situated Finitude.D. R. Koukal - 2022 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 41 (5):567-578.
    This essay offers a critique of the culture of specio-vocationalism in American higher education by first drawing on Edmund Husserl’s conception of “world” and connecting this notion to education conceived as a “world-disclosing” activity. The essay will then give an account of how the trends of vocationalization and specialization manifest themselves in contemporary university culture, and how they work together to “de-world” the lives of our students and deprive them of possibilities that are part of what it means to be (...)
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  • Nature, technology, and theology.William H. Klink - 1992 - Zygon 27 (2):203-210.
    Modern technology presents new challenges and possibilities to the environment and life on earth. It is argued that ecology as the science of the earth as a whole cannot provide the means for making technical decisions pertaining to the environment. An alternative means is suggested in which modern technology provides the medium for communicating with nature, so that a dialogue, an intruding in and listening to nature, becomes the basis both for seeing modern technology in a new light and for (...)
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  • Ecology and eschatology: Science and theological modeling.William H. Klink - 1994 - Zygon 29 (4):529-545.
    The possibility of in-breakings of God in science is discussed. A realist philosophy of science is used as a framework in which new paradigms are seen as providing ever better approximations to the true underlying structure of nature, which will be revealed in the eschaton. It is argued that ecology–the study of the earth as a whole–cannot be treated as a natural science because there can be no paradigms for understanding the earth as a whole. Instead technology is used as (...)
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  • At Home in the Seamless Web: Agency, Obduracy, and the Ethics of Metropolitan Growth.Robert Kirkman - 2009 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 34 (2):234-258.
    Political responses to metropolitan growth in the United States and elsewhere should include careful ethical deliberation, but ethical judgment and action are limited by the involvement of individual moral agents in the complex processes that give shape to the built environment. I propose that casting the built environment as a heterogeneous sociotechnical ensemble can provide useful insight into the limits of ethics, particularly through the concept of obduracy. To the extent components of an ensemble are obdurate, they can stop or (...)
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  • The Good, the Bad, and the Social: On Living as an Answerable Agent.Robert Wade Kenny - 2007 - Sociological Theory 25 (3):268 - 291.
    This article describes answerability, a fundamental component of social reason and action. "Holding answerable" and "being answerable" are characterized in terms of their roles in the drama of human relations, and our general tendency to anticipate answerable, rather than ethical, behavior in situations that are ethically problematic is discussed.
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  • Informationalising matter: systems understandings of the nanoscale.Matthew Kearnes - 2008 - Spontaneous Generations 2 (1):99.
    Themes of mastery, domination and power are familiar to any scholar of modern technology. Science is commonly cast as enabling the technological control over both the natural and physical worlds. Indeed, Francis Bacon famously equated scientific knowledge with power itself—stating that ‘knowledge itself is a power’. Bacon’s now ubiquitous phrase—commonly repeated as the banal ‘knowledge is power’—was an attempt to combat three heresies in scriptural interpretation by asserting the conjunction between biblical knowledge and divine power. Opening his critique of the (...)
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  • Post-industrial society and third world development.Benjamin Hourani - 1990 - World Futures 28 (1):93-103.
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  • Nuclear Optimism and the Technological Imperative:: A Study of the Pacific Northwest Electrical Network.Steven M. Hoffman & John Byrne - 1991 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 11 (2):63-77.
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  • Specialists without spirit: crisis in the nursing profession.S. Hewa & R. W. Hetherington - 1990 - Journal of Medical Ethics 16 (4):179-184.
    This paper examines the crisis in the nursing profession in Western industrial societies in the light of Max Weber's theory of rationalisation. The domination of instrumental rational action in modern industrial societies in evident in the field of modern medicine. The burgeoning mechanistic approach to the human body and health makes modern health care services increasingly devoid of human values. Although the nursing profession has been influenced by various changes that took place in health care during the last few decades (...)
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  • The Role of Prophetic Critique in Clifford Christians's Philosophy of Technology.Kevin Healey - 2010 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 25 (2):121-138.
    In recent years, scholars have devoted more attention to the “prophetic” critique of mass media. Clifford Christians has served as both an originator and an ongoing contributor to these discussions. Beginning with his doctoral thesis on Jacques Ellul, a concern for the prophetic has been a consistent thread throughout his career. This paper begins by examining Ellul's influence on Christians's approach, with an emphasis on media ecology, ontology, and the concept of technique. I then summarize Christians's critique of Ellul, and (...)
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  • Are There Ideological Aspects to the Modernization of Agriculture?Egbert Hardeman & Henk Jochemsen - 2012 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 25 (5):657-674.
    In this paper we try to identify the roots of the persistent contemporary problems in our modernized agriculture: overproduction, loss of biodiversity and of soil fertility, the risk of large animal disease, social controversies on the lack of animal welfare and culling of animals, etc. Attention is paid to the historical development of present-day farming in Holland as an example of European agriculture. We see a blinkered quest for efficiency in the industrialization of agriculture since the Second World War. Key (...)
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  • Techno-Growth Mania: The Means Justify the Means.William Griffen - 1999 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 19 (1):17-24.
    Education policy, in general, reflects the past and present embrace of science and technology as progressive forces to be further cultivated. Technology has a profound effect on education policy. It serves to divert rather than enhance critical thinking about the future of our race and planet. In addition, the emphasis on technology has dramatically increased vocational emphases that elevate instrumental pedagogical concerns over philosophic reflection on ends. The technology-driven, vocationally rooted school agendas ignore alternative cultural reflections as powerful forces and (...)
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  • “I’ve a Feeling We’re Not in Kansas Anymore”: The Commercialmzation and Commodification of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education.Steve Grineski - 2000 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 20 (1):19-28.
    This article examines and analyzes the private sector’s commercialization and commodification of teaching and learning in higher education. An important issue related to this fast-growing relationship is the blind acceptance of the marketplace model as it relates to technology use, teaching, and learning in higher education. This relationship is suspect from the outset because the goals and purposes important to the private sector do not blend with those important to educational communities. Moreover, there appears to be little concern about implications (...)
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  • Curriculum Design Considerations for Technology Education.James R. Gray - 1989 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 9 (1):33-45.
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  • Lend Me Your Ears: The Truth in the Fiction of The Glass Bees by Ernst Jünger.Kim Goudreau - 2010 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 30 (4):240-246.
    The Glass Bees by Ernst Jünger was first published in Germany in 1957. It is a speculative fictional work that foretells much of what today is the reality of life in a technological society. Of particular import is his portrayal of the ambiguity of human character and moral guideposts that leave only power to mediate human relationships. These psychological and cultural symptoms can be traced to a society under the unremitting spell of the extension of technique. Headlines drawn from today (...)
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  • Habermas on Purposive-Rational Action: A Contribution to the Understanding of Ellul's Technique.Kim A. Goudreau - 2003 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 23 (3):174-179.
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  • American Beauty: The Seduction of the Visual Image in the Culture of Technology.Kim Goudreau - 2006 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 26 (1):23-30.
    The critical examination of the film American Beauty reveals characteristics illustrative of the form of culture coextensive with modern technological societies. This form of culture creates an imbalance favoring the aesthetical over the ethical dimensions of human orientation. Absorption into the aesthetical dimension of the electronic or digital visual image significantly reduces the capacity of culture to nurture a meaningful symbolic world. The relative absence of a meaningful symbolic world leaves both identity and social relationships without a foundation.
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  • Images of Technology in Popular Films: Discussion and Filmography.Steven L. Goldman - 1989 - Science, Technology and Human Values 14 (3):275-301.
    From at least 1925 to the present, science and technology have been depicted largely negatively in popular films of all genres. The images of science and technology in films reflect consistent public anxiety over the linkage between science, technology, and corporate power; the complacency of government agen cies and scientists toward new knowledge and artifacts; the insensitivity of scientists toward the moral implications of their research and its applications; and the co-option of technical knowledge by vested corporate and government interests. (...)
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  • Ellul and the Weather.Leigh Glover & John Byrne - 2005 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 25 (1):4-16.
    Global climate change may result in a wide array of social and environmental harms, and this prospect has given rise to an international treaty, the 1992 UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. Scientific uncertainties, nation state politics, and economic resistance had to be addressed before this landmark environmental agreement could be realized. However, questions remain about the foundations and core commitments of this agreement. Ellul's characterology of technique is applied to the task of building a critique of the current international (...)
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  • Philosophical explorations on energy transition.Robert-Jan Geerts - unknown
    This dissertation explores energy transition from a philosophical perspective. It puts forward the thesis that energy production and consumption are so intimately intertwined with society that the transition towards a sustainable alternative will involve more than simply implementing novel technologies. Fossil energy sources and a growth-based economy have resulted in very specific energy practices, which will change in the future. Broader reflection is needed to understand how and in which direction such change is acceptable and desirable. This reflection is initiated (...)
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  • The Value of Ellul’s Analysis in Understanding Propaganda in the Helping Professions.Eileen Gambrill - 2012 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 32 (3):187-202.
    This article draws on Ellul’s analysis of propaganda in understanding propaganda in the helping professions. Key in such an analysis is the interweaving of the psychological and sociological. Contrary to the discourse in mission statements of professional organizations and their codes of ethics calling for informed consent, competence of professionals and taking advantage of research findings, in everyday practice we find a variety of avoidable lapses, including decontextualized problem framing, bogus claims concerning risks, accuracy of assessment measures, and effectiveness of (...)
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  • Technology, Religion, and Justice: The Problems of Disembedded and Disembodied Law.Frederick A. Foltz & Franz A. Foltz - 2006 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 26 (6):463-471.
    In this article, the authors explore how technology has helped erode society’s conceptions of justice. Law, via juridification, has replaced the concept of justice with one of efficiency. The authors argue that this has been largely a result of the destruction of society’s common story or vision and the introduction of the computer and the Internet as tools enabling technique to replace that story. They offer a perspective on how justice operated in traditional societies, using the Judeo-Christian religious tradition. Finally, (...)
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  • The Search for Trust: Technology, Religion, and Society’s Dis-Ease.Frederick Foltz & Franz Foltz - 2005 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 25 (2):115-128.
    Modern technology, and information technology in particular, has changed the nature of human interaction, which has created a certain “disease” as more and more transactions move from the familiarity of traditional community to the abstractness of modern society. This article explores two studies of trust that emerged in the past decade as a result of this “disease.” The first, rational choice, redefines trust as a risk management tool. The second, social capital, reexamines the traditional concept in light of the present (...)
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  • Five Arguments for Increasing Public Participation in Making Science Policy.Franz Foltz - 1999 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 19 (2):117-127.
    In this article, the author, after describing the technocratic nature of the current science policy process, presents five arguments for changing it into a more participatory one. All five arguments draw on different sectors of the STS endeavor—both high and low church—to show why increased public involvement would benefit science. The first argues that the degree of potential harm from science-based technology demands greater accountability. The second draws on the adage that the buyer should have some say on the product. (...)
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  • The Moral Impotence of Contemporary Experts.Yves R. Filion - 2004 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 24 (4):342-352.
    Technological growth in developed and developing countries in the 20th century has lent a great deal of importance to scientific reasoning in the management of human affairs. An important outgrowth has been the development of systems thinking to organize the workplace. The business reengineering process and the enterprise resource planning system are contemporary instances of the application of systems thinking that have had a serious influence on the modern work organization. This article traces the roots and evolution of systems thinking (...)
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  • Causality, poetics, and grammatology: the role of computation in machine seeing.Iain Emsley - 2021 - AI and Society 36 (4):1225-1231.
    Digitised collections and born digital items, such as photos or video, exist beyond the scale of human viewing. New methods are required to read, understand and work with the data, resulting in computation becoming increasingly central to both creation of a cultural reality and as the interpretative tool and practice. If artists’ look, then how might a machine see as a critical tool? Developing work on computational culture and the Next Rembrandt project as unstable digital object, this paper considers how (...)
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  • Toward a synthesis of criminal justice planning and evaluation.Richard Ball - 1985 - World Futures 21 (3):245-262.
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  • When Technique Is the Foundation of Health Care.Raymond Downing - 2012 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 32 (4):265-268.
    One of the clearest examples of a technological system, in the sense that Ellul discussed it, is contemporary biomedical health care. The foundation of technological systems is technique: efficient methods for achieving isolated goals. However, the goal of health care should be to achieve health in the full sense of wholeness. Traditional healing systems addressed heath in this sense, but biomedicine cannot; attempting to use the techniques of traditional systems without the accompanying culture ruptures those systems. Using the contemporary epidemic (...)
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  • Design for Community: Toward a Communitarian Ergonomics. [REVIEW]Taylor Dotson - 2013 - Philosophy and Technology 26 (2):139-157.
    This paper explores how the designed world could be better supportive of better communal ways of relating. In pursuit of this end, I put the philosophy of technology dealing with the role that technologies play in shaping, directing, mediating, and legislating human action in better communication with a diverse literature concerning community. I argue that community ought to viewed as composed of three interrelated dimensions: experience, structure, and practice. Specifically, it is a psychological sense evoked via a particular arrangement of (...)
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  • Technical Mediation and Subjectivation: Tracing and Extending Foucault’s Philosophy of Technology. [REVIEW]Steven Dorrestijn - 2012 - Philosophy and Technology 25 (2):221-241.
    This article focuses on tracing and extending Michel Foucault’s contributions to the philosophy of technology. At first sight his work on power seems the most relevant. In his later work on subjectivation and ethics technology is absent. However, notably by recombining Foucault’s work on power with his work on subjectivation, does his work contribute to solving pertinent problems in current approaches to the ethics of technology. First, Foucault’s position is compared to critical theory and Heidegger, and associated with the approach (...)
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  • Ellul's Technological Imperative Reconsidered.Walter E. Davis - 1998 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 18 (6):446-457.
    In light of recent advances, I reconsider Jacques Ellul's technological imperative in which he places technology in a broad framework of “technique” (including but not limited to machines) meaning any complex of standardized procedures having absolute efficiency for attaining a predetermined result. He conceptualizes technique as a self-perpetuating, totalizing, and deterministic force inevitably leading to self-destruction if not transcended. Here, I provide support for some of Ellul's claims while addressing some of the important criticisms. I suggest a different kind of (...)
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  • The STS Curriculum: What Have We Learned in Twenty Years?Stephen H. Cutcliffe - 1990 - Science, Technology and Human Values 15 (3):360-372.
    The interdisciplinary academic field of Science, Technology, and Society Studies is now approximately two decades old. As the field has evolved, its central curricular mission has come to be the explication of science and technology as complex enterprises that take place in specific social contexts shaped by, and in turn, shaping, human values as reflected and refracted in cultural, political, and economic institutions. Despite, or perhaps because of, the field's maturation, there remain a number of as yet unanswered questions that (...)
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  • Praxis Exiled: Herbert Marcuse and the One Dimensional University.Joseph Cunningham - 2013 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 47 (4):537-547.
    Leading Frankfurt School theorist, Herbert Marcuse, possessed an intricate relationship with higher education. As a professor, Marcuse participated in the 1960s student movements, believing that college students had potential as revolutionary subjects. Additionally, Marcuse advocated for a college education empowered by a form of praxis that extended education outside the university into realms of critical thought and action. However, the more pessimistic facet of his theory, best represented in the canonical One Dimensional Man, now seems to be the dominant ideology (...)
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  • The Evolution of culture.Vilmos Csanyi - 1992 - World Futures 34 (3):215-223.
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  • Individual Autonomy, Law, and Technology: Should Soft Determinism Guide Legal Analysis?Arthur J. Cockfield - 2010 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 30 (1):4-8.
    How one thinks about the relationship between individual autonomy (sometimes referred to as individual willpower or human agency) and technology can influence the way legal thinkers develop policy at the intersection of law and technology. Perspectives that fall toward the `machines control us' end of the spectrum may support more interventionist legal policies while those who identify more closely with the `we are in charge of machines' position may refuse to interfere with technological developments. The concept of soft determinism charts (...)
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  • On Living in Nirvana.Clifford G. Christians - 2010 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 25 (2):139-159.
    I am called herewith a collaborator-in-chief, mountain climber, and prophet. They all arise from the writers' largesse, not facts on the ground. But I will embrace them momentarily and then turn to...
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  • Nuclear technology, the threat and the urgency to philosophize.Nader Chokr - 1985 - World Futures 21 (1):1-21.
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