Technological Man: the Myth and the RealityBraziller, 1969 - 336 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página 108
... effect , will be a universal language for some purposes , based on the computer's needs . By 1990 , many confidently predict , computers will be available with the equivalent of IQ's of 150 in terms of their ability to respond to ...
... effect , will be a universal language for some purposes , based on the computer's needs . By 1990 , many confidently predict , computers will be available with the equivalent of IQ's of 150 in terms of their ability to respond to ...
Página 118
... effects of technological change instead may be dislocation , disjunction between ideas and reality , uncer- tainty , confusion and a disintegrated society . Some social scientists would contend that ... effect , then 118 TECHNOLOGICAL MAN.
... effects of technological change instead may be dislocation , disjunction between ideas and reality , uncer- tainty , confusion and a disintegrated society . Some social scientists would contend that ... effect , then 118 TECHNOLOGICAL MAN.
Página 165
... effect , not the cause , of a loss of freedom . But the amount of political dissidence is not the sole factor in ... effects . The more complex an organism , the more vulnerable ; a single skillful blow of the hand can kill a human being ...
... effect , not the cause , of a loss of freedom . But the amount of political dissidence is not the sole factor in ... effects . The more complex an organism , the more vulnerable ; a single skillful blow of the hand can kill a human being ...
Contenido
Technology and the Rediscovery of Politics | 155 |
8 | 203 |
Bibliography | 273 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
activity advance alienation American automation B. F. Skinner basic become behavior biological bourgeois bureaucratic C. P. Snow central century Christianity cities communications contemporary created Daniel Bell decisions despite dominant economic effect electronic elite Ellul environment especially existence existential revolution fact factors force freedom future genetic groups Harvey Cox Herman Kahn human Ibid ideas increasing increasingly individual industrial civilization industrial society intellectual interests Jacques Ellul less living machine major man's Marshall McLuhan Marxism mass society McLuhan means ment military myth nations nature nological nomic organized physical population possible Post-Industrial Society postindustrial predicted Press problems production race radically reality religion Robert role science and technology scientific scientists sexual simply social sociological prophets Soviet Union space space race standards suburbia symbiosis tech technological change Teilhard de Chardin tion traditional United universe values Washington Post workers world view York