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Technology and the Future

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TECHNOLOGY AND THE FUTURE offers an unsurpassed collection of readings on technology's impact on the individual and society. In this substantial revision, Teich incorporates important new topics, such as the revolutions in genetics and information technology. New selections by significant contemporary thinkers include readings by Langdon Winner, Thomas Hughes, Donald Norman, and Leon Kass.

Paperback

First published December 12, 1951

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Albert H. Teich

22 books1 follower

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5 stars
11 (21%)
4 stars
10 (19%)
3 stars
19 (36%)
2 stars
9 (17%)
1 star
3 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Annika.
3 reviews
October 26, 2011
A nice variety of readings, ranging from thought-provoking to political to boring. Not a quick read. Favorite essay: Buddhist Economics by E.F. Schumacher.
Profile Image for Robert Lewis.
Author 5 books25 followers
October 23, 2019
This anthology of essays and book chapters from a wide variety of authors (many of whom will be familiar to most readers) provides an often interesting overview of how technology interacts with society. The variety of topics covered make it quite ambitious in its approach, though it's a bit of a mixed bag in its execution. As one might expect from a multi-author work, the quality of the chapters varies widely with some offering deep and carefully-balanced analyses of complicated issues and others amounting to little more than polemical rants by neo-Luddites.

The editor seems to have done a decent job of curating the articles for variety in their views (though the attentive reader will certainly notice a left-wing political bias running through many of the entries), and the reader interested in but not informed about issues related to technology will find the book beneficial on the whole. However, readers who are informed about issues related to technology will find themselves skimming large sections of the book, desperately looking for some information they haven't already read countless times in their morning newspapers. Therein lies the book's greatest problem: it simply doesn't get deep enough into any of the many issues it covers to offer anything new to anyone but the most entry-level of students of technology.

Read it if you're new to these issues or if you're required to read it for a course, but if you've already studied technology (and particularly social or legal issues related to technology) for a while, you probably won't learn much from it.
Profile Image for Monena Hall.
75 reviews6 followers
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November 13, 2013
Originally read it for a class. Probably my favorite class. Would like to read it again.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews