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Vanderburg, Willem H. – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2012
This article explores the social and historical conditions under which "people changing technology" overshadows that of "technology changing people" through its influence on human life, society, and the biosphere. Social construction and determinism are thus two sides of the same coin. However, both ignore the inseparability of thoughts and action…
Descriptors: Influence of Technology, Responsibility, Personal Autonomy, Mythology
Chandler, Jennifer A. – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2012
The ideas of technological determinism and the autonomy of technology are long-standing and widespread. This article explores why the use of certain technologies is perceived to be obligatory, thus fueling the fatalism of technological determinism and undermining our sense of freedom vis-a-vis the use of technologies. Three main mechanisms that…
Descriptors: Technology, Responsibility, Personal Autonomy, Influence of Technology
Chandler, Jennifer – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2010
This short note considers the relationships between human autonomy, both individual and collective, and technology. At the collective level, numerous writers have observed the profound effects on society of technological discoveries--leading to the suggestion that societal mechanisms through which we might seek to make deliberate choices about…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Cultural Context, Personal Autonomy, Technology
Kontour, Kyle – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2012
With the rise of the so-called military-entertainment complex, critical scholars note with alarm the integration of the political economies of entertainment companies and the military, in particular its potential influence on millions of young people who consume its concomitant films, toys and especially video games. Seen from a broad perspective,…
Descriptors: Video Games, Masculinity, Social Theories, War
VanderSteen, Jonathan – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2011
Engineers today cannot meet their professional obligation to the welfare of society if they do not have a broad, multidisciplinary vision, and yet a multidisciplinary vision is becoming enormously difficult to obtain. A new curriculum must emerge that can integrate a focused, discipline-based scientific approach with an integrated approach. To do…
Descriptors: Engineering, Role, Professional Occupations, Interdisciplinary Approach
Freund, Peter; Martin, George – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2009
The automobile is a key artifact for understanding the relationship between technology and society. As it has developed into a mass-produced and mass-consumed commodity, it has played an increasing role in social life and its built environments. In its most exaggerated manifestation, in parts of the United States, the car is a singular transport…
Descriptors: Ethics, Influence of Technology, Science and Society, Motor Vehicles
Blackmore, Tim – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2010
Creating memory during and after wartime trauma is vexed by state attempts to control public and private discourse. Science fiction author Iain Banks' novel "Look to Windward" proposes different ways of preserving memory and culture, from posthuman memory devices, to artwork, to architecture, to personal, local ways of remembering.…
Descriptors: Memory, War, Foreign Countries, Influence of Technology
Ribbat, Christoph – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2010
In a satiric chapter of David Foster Wallace's novel "Infinite Jest," a mock media expert reports how American consumers of the near future recoil from a new communication device known as "videophony" and return to the voice-only telephone of the Bell Era. This article explores the said chapter in the framework of media theories reading the…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Communication, Telecommunications, Video Technology, Influence of Technology
Gordon, Ruthanna – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2009
Understanding the development of public opinion about emerging technologies, when the scope of that emergence is still speculative, poses particular challenges. Opinions and beliefs may be drawn from conflicting experts in multiple fields, media portrayals with varying biases, and fictional narratives that portray diverse possible futures. This…
Descriptors: Biotechnology, Social Psychology, Public Support, Cognitive Psychology
Vanderburg, Willem H. – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2009
The hypothesis of an antieconomy developed in part 1 is incommensurate with mainstream economics. This article explores three reasons for this situation: the limits of discipline-based scholarship in general and of mainstream economics in particular, the status of economists in contemporary societies, and the failure of economists to accept any…
Descriptors: Economic Impact, Economic Factors, Economic Research, Democracy
Vanderburg, Willem H. – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2009
Parts 1 and 2 explore the hypothesis that the application of mainstream economics has led to economies becoming uneconomic, which is as close as a social science can get to experimentally disproving its theories. One of the primary reasons for this failure is traced to the characteristics of the knowledge infrastructures of contemporary societies,…
Descriptors: Social Sciences, Economics, Crisis Management, Knowledge Management
Blackmore, Tim – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2009
The Bush Administration's quiet resumption of, or initiation of new, nuclear weapons programs aimed militarizing space, and erecting a missile defense shield that would have the effect of rolling back 19 years of solid detente, has gone largely unnoticed over the last eight years. Weapons makers, government officials and politicians have expressed…
Descriptors: Novels, Literary Genres, Futures (of Society), Death