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The Luddite's Guide to Technology par…
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The Luddite's Guide to Technology (édition 2012)

par C.J. S. Hayward (Auteur)

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Gentle Reader; "For a list of ways technology has failed to improve the quality of life, please press three." -Alice Kahn as quoted in reference to how IT can make phone jails. The kind of concerns I have read in webpages by Humane Tech people echo some of the concerns voiced by a then former advertising executive Jerry Mander in "Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television." It's an older style of book and it reads slowly, but a good kind of slow. Also, it is (c)1974. Not that 1974 technology is identical to today's technology. It isn't. But the difference is not a difference between things that are simply unrelated. It's more like a transition first to chewing coca leaves, then purer and purer technological cocaine, then when cocaine could not be refined any more, innovating beyond crack. Someone who is concerned about crack would do well to heed the earlier history discussed in literature concerning cocaine and its threats, and perhaps look much further back to religious and philosophical giants who discuss appropriate consumption of a wine that was weaker than most beers are today. With a light tweak, Plato's famous "Allegory of the Cave" has everything to say about people glued to screens. (Perhaps Plato doesn't really need to be tweaked, but I try to make it clearer.) In one online conversation, one member said that a very wise history teacher had told him in school that you can tell the health of a civilization by how long its monumental architecture lasts. Surviving buildings from Egypt, Rome, and Greece were all from "the middle of their greatness," she said. In today's USA, the strongest buildings are colonial. We are in the process of moving to more and more ephemeral wealth. It was a note of sarcasm, and possibly an urban legend, when a couple of young lovebirds decided to marry "for as long as we both shall love," and a professor gave the gift of paper plates. However, much of our wealth is pushing the envelope on paper plates. Most of us own very little precious metal and most of us wouldn't know how to trade with it. Credit used to coexist with cash; now cash is dying. And if I may speak to an Amazon bookworm, bookworms are being deprived of books. We've moved to eBook readers, which are nice for a time but awfully fragile compared to a bookshelf. Now for $10 a month bookworms can enjoy unlimited reading without even owning books. Some Kindle book pages now list a sale price and a rental price. Albert Einstein famously said that the greatest problems we face cannot be solved by the same order of thinking that created them. Humane Tech folks, I do not believe that a change of content is enough. We need something bigger. We need, for instance, virtue. If I could offer a word of advice to those interested in Humane Tech: "Read the pages of history, and historic works critiquing and questioning technology, a legacy that has flourished in recent years but is as old as Plato's 'Phaedrus' in which an inventor is rightly told that writing would profoundly alter the nature of knowledge (anthropologists note that the opposite of 'literate' is not 'illiterate' but 'oral'). Read 'Four Arguments for the Elimination , 'Amusing Ourselves to Death', and 'The Plug-in Drug.' Read this humble offering, and if you can, connect it with virtue and ascesis and the Philokalia if you can." Cordially, and With Love,C.J.S. Hayward… (plus d'informations)
Membre:WilliamHecht
Titre:The Luddite's Guide to Technology
Auteurs:C.J. S. Hayward (Auteur)
Info:CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (2012), 240 pages
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The Luddite's Guide to Technology par C. J. S. Hayward

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Gentle Reader; "For a list of ways technology has failed to improve the quality of life, please press three." -Alice Kahn as quoted in reference to how IT can make phone jails. The kind of concerns I have read in webpages by Humane Tech people echo some of the concerns voiced by a then former advertising executive Jerry Mander in "Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television." It's an older style of book and it reads slowly, but a good kind of slow. Also, it is (c)1974. Not that 1974 technology is identical to today's technology. It isn't. But the difference is not a difference between things that are simply unrelated. It's more like a transition first to chewing coca leaves, then purer and purer technological cocaine, then when cocaine could not be refined any more, innovating beyond crack. Someone who is concerned about crack would do well to heed the earlier history discussed in literature concerning cocaine and its threats, and perhaps look much further back to religious and philosophical giants who discuss appropriate consumption of a wine that was weaker than most beers are today. With a light tweak, Plato's famous "Allegory of the Cave" has everything to say about people glued to screens. (Perhaps Plato doesn't really need to be tweaked, but I try to make it clearer.) In one online conversation, one member said that a very wise history teacher had told him in school that you can tell the health of a civilization by how long its monumental architecture lasts. Surviving buildings from Egypt, Rome, and Greece were all from "the middle of their greatness," she said. In today's USA, the strongest buildings are colonial. We are in the process of moving to more and more ephemeral wealth. It was a note of sarcasm, and possibly an urban legend, when a couple of young lovebirds decided to marry "for as long as we both shall love," and a professor gave the gift of paper plates. However, much of our wealth is pushing the envelope on paper plates. Most of us own very little precious metal and most of us wouldn't know how to trade with it. Credit used to coexist with cash; now cash is dying. And if I may speak to an Amazon bookworm, bookworms are being deprived of books. We've moved to eBook readers, which are nice for a time but awfully fragile compared to a bookshelf. Now for $10 a month bookworms can enjoy unlimited reading without even owning books. Some Kindle book pages now list a sale price and a rental price. Albert Einstein famously said that the greatest problems we face cannot be solved by the same order of thinking that created them. Humane Tech folks, I do not believe that a change of content is enough. We need something bigger. We need, for instance, virtue. If I could offer a word of advice to those interested in Humane Tech: "Read the pages of history, and historic works critiquing and questioning technology, a legacy that has flourished in recent years but is as old as Plato's 'Phaedrus' in which an inventor is rightly told that writing would profoundly alter the nature of knowledge (anthropologists note that the opposite of 'literate' is not 'illiterate' but 'oral'). Read 'Four Arguments for the Elimination , 'Amusing Ourselves to Death', and 'The Plug-in Drug.' Read this humble offering, and if you can, connect it with virtue and ascesis and the Philokalia if you can." Cordially, and With Love,C.J.S. Hayward

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