Technopoly: The Surrender of Culture to TechnologyKnopf, 1992 - 222 páginas With characteristic wit and candor, Neil Postman, our most astute and engaging cultural critic, launches a trenchant and harrowing warning against the tyranny of machines over man in the late twentieth century. We live in a time when physical well-being is determined by CAT scan results. Facts need the substantiation of statistical study. The human mind needs "deprogramming" while computers catch devastating "viruses." We live, then, in a Technopoly -- a self-justifying, self-perpetuating system wherein technology of every kind is cheerfully granted sovereignty over social institutions and national life. In this provocative work, the author of Amusing Ourselves to Death chronicles our transformation from a society that uses technology to one that is shaped by it, as he traces its effects upon what we mean by politics, intellect, religion, history -- even privacy and truth. But if Technopoly is disturbing, it is also a passionate rallying cry filled with a humane rationalism as it asserts the manifold means by which technology, placed within the context of our larger human goals and social values, is an invaluable instrument for furthering the most worthy human endeavors. - Back cover. |
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Página 98
... patient's chest to hear the heart beat ) , but the patient's youth and sex discouraged him . Laënnec then remembered that sound traveling through solid bodies is amplified . He rolled some sheets of paper into a cylinder , placed one ...
... patient's chest to hear the heart beat ) , but the patient's youth and sex discouraged him . Laënnec then remembered that sound traveling through solid bodies is amplified . He rolled some sheets of paper into a cylinder , placed one ...
Página 101
... patient's experience and body through technical machinery . In this stage , we see the emergence of specialists - for example , pathologists and radi- ologists — who interpret the meaning of technical information and have no connection ...
... patient's experience and body through technical machinery . In this stage , we see the emergence of specialists - for example , pathologists and radi- ologists — who interpret the meaning of technical information and have no connection ...
Página 102
... patient now , in contrast to a century ago , has become so arid that the patient is not restrained by intimacy or empathy from appealing to the courts . Moreover , doctors are reimbursed by medical - insurance agencies on the basis of ...
... patient now , in contrast to a century ago , has become so arid that the patient is not restrained by intimacy or empathy from appealing to the courts . Moreover , doctors are reimbursed by medical - insurance agencies on the basis of ...
Conteúdo
From Tools to Technocracy | 21 |
From Technocracy to Technopoly | 40 |
The Improbable World | 56 |
Direitos autorais | |
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abacists American answer artificial intelligence ascent of humanity B. F. Skinner Bacon become believe bureaucracy called canonical hours claim computer technology Copernicus course created doctors example experiment fact Freud function Galileo Ginger Rogers give Gutenberg HAGOTH idea ideology imagine institutions intelligence invention Invisible Technologies irrelevant judgment Kepler knowledge language Lewis Mumford machine machinery Marx means medicine medieval ment metaphor Milgram mind moral narrative nature Neil Postman nineteenth century Nonetheless opinion patient perhaps political polling possible principle problem production question reason religious Revolution Richard Arkwright schools scientific Scientism scientists sense social research Stanley Milgram statistics stethoscope story subjects symbols teach Tech technical techniques technocracy technol Technopoly television tell tests Thamus theory Theuth things thought tion tool-using culture tradition William Farish words world-view writing York