List
Facebook Twitter Reddit Tumblr Email

Both from Technology, Time, and the Conversations of Modernity, by Lorenzo C. Simpson:

“[‘Technology’] refers to that set of practices whose purpose is, through ever more radical interventions into nature […], systematically to place the future at our disposal […] through hastening the achievement of a goal located in the future; through control over what occurs in the future […], and through maintaining a given state while containing and reducing the period of deviations from it.” (p. 24)

“The technological reduction reduces experience to resources, tools and products, just as the scientific ‘world’ consists of constructs and pointer readings. We might then well understand science and technology as forms of life, but they are forms of life lacking ‘depth’; that is, they are essentially worldless.” (p. 48)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  Posts

1 4 5 6 7
September 28th, 2011

Phenomenal experiences of technology

In “Feelings and phenomenal experiences” by Schwarz and Clore, in Social Psychology: Handbook of Basic Principles, they discuss the role […]

September 28th, 2011

The material and political confinement of social constructions

Between the politics of technology and the social construction of technological systems (SCOTS)[1], exists considerable tension over three distinct problems […]

August 2nd, 2011

Dispatches from the Decade of the Leak: The Antisec retaliation for Anonymous arrests

“I do not believe in leaks. I would execute leakers. They’re betraying our country.” –Ralph Peters, U.S. Army Lieutenant Colonel […]

April 8th, 2011

The Decade of the Leak

After the first major Wikileaks release and the subsequent “manhunt” for Julian Assange, I dubbed this the Decade of the […]

January 23rd, 2011

Review of “Grassroots Postmodernism” by Esteva and Prakash

Esteva and Prakash’s Grassroots Postmodernism presents a powerful theoretical model for alternatives to development.  In reading this accessible, yet deep […]

December 19th, 2010

Jeph Jerman: calling out the voice of animated nature

Jeph Jerman could be described as an electro-acoustic artist, an experimental musician, or an avant-garde performer.  But what Jeph is, […]

May 12th, 2010

Personality Online: Anonymous, Toxic and Otherwise Destructive

I’ve been intensively studying the literature on how technology changes society. My focus has been on technologies much more simple […]

February 22nd, 2010

Post-development theory, alternatives to development and activist anthropology

In “Anthropology and the Development Encounter,” Arturo Escobar discusses the past approaches of development anthropology as problematic.  He focuses on […]

December 3rd, 2009

Characterizing a paradigm shift: The UN discourse on sustainable development as the greening of globalism

Below is the introduction to a 15,000 essay I just completed, summing up the theoretical and historical basis for my […]

November 14th, 2009

Quote from “Sustainable Development and Agenda 21” by Timothy Doyle

When I was researching for my work on Agenda 21 and the UNCED, I found very little wholesale criticism in […]