Visions Of Technology

A Century Of Vital Debate About Machines Systems And The Human World

Richard Rhodes author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Simon & Schuster

Published:19th Mar '01

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Visions Of Technology cover

Richard Rhodes won the Pulitzer Prize for "The Making of the Atomic Bomb", and he recieved the History of Science Society's Watson Davis and Helen Miles Davis Prize for "Dark Sun".

Pulitzer Prize winning author Richard Rhodes provides a lively collection of writings about the unexpected and paradoxical ways in which technology has changed our lives.Technology has been the blessing and the bane of the 20th Century. Human life-span has nearly doubled in the West, but no century ever killed more human beings with new technologies than this. New technology became part of the machine of war, ranging from the staggering loss of life of the First World War to the media spectacle which brought the war in the Gulf into our living rooms. Improvements in agriculture have fed increasing billions, but now pesticides and chemicals threaten to poison the Earth. Richard Rhodes attempts to answer some fundamental questions arising from the prominence which technology plays in all of our lives. These problems and paradoxes have stirred impassioned debate, yet despite the central role technology has played in this century, VISIONS OF TECHNOLOGY is the first book to represent the rich diversity of commentary about this vital subject. This provocative treasury hightlights the views of the century's most prominent technological figures from Henry Ford, H.G. Wells, Rachel Carson and Albert Einstein to Aldous Huxley and John Glenn. As the cultural ambivalence towards technology takes us into the next century, Richard Rhodes provides a timely forum of debate about machines, systems and the human world.

"With a keen eye for both breadth and detail, for irony and insight, Rhodes has found some of the best thinking by figures ranging from Henry Ford and Albert Einstein to Rachel Carson and Joan Didion."–Scott LaFee, The San Diego Union-Tribune
"A captivating encapsulation of our dissonant feelings about technology."–Gilbert Taylor, Booklist
"The book reads like a condensed history of technology, told through the strained voices of those who marvel -- or cower -- at its impact."–Jeff Pooley, Brill's Content

ISBN: 9780684863115

Dimensions: 214mm x 140mm x 25mm

Weight: 420g

400 pages