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Make Technology Our Tool, not Our Master
[May 31, 2016]

Make Technology Our Tool, not Our Master


DALLAS, May 31, 2016 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Humanity aspires to numerous lofty goals such preserving the environment, reducing inequality, protecting human rights, feeding and housing the poor, and enhancing public health, but renowned sociologist Amitai Etzioni of George Washington argues in the spring edition of Issues in Science and Technology that we will make little progress toward these ends unless we fundamentally change our relationship with technology.



Etzioni observes that the human approach to the world has evolved considerably over time. For most of history, humans adopted an attitude of passive acceptance of the natural world and social structures. Then in the 1600s began a shift toward what has been called the Age of Reason and a growing belief that humans could better understand the world through science and change it with technology and social action. This change in attitude led to social, political, and economic change manifested in the growth of democracy and the industrial revolution. Economic growth accelerated, and developments in electrification, transportation, education, and communications transformed human life.

This history of success imbued humans with the belief that knowledge and technology were the keys to solving all problems, but Etzioni sees evidence of the limits of this belief. Technology also contributed to the destructiveness of two world wars, environmental degradation, and an increase in economic inequality. He worries now that the world has become too attached to the relentless pursuit of economic growth and this become the servant of a form of technological progress that does not necessarily lead to increasing human happiness and fulfillment.


He maintains that the time has come for a realignment of human in human attitudes: "I see great merit in shifting the focus of our actions from seeking ever-greater wealth to investing more of our time and resources in social lives, public action, and spiritual and intellectual activities—in communitarian pursuits." His article "Transforming the Active Orientation" provides a roadmap for how humanity can regain control of society's direction and make progress toward achieving the goals that will not be reached by pursuing a technology-driven path. He wants to see us put technology in proper perspective, to follow Pope Francis's advice "to put technology at the service of another type of progress, one which is healthier, more human, more social, more integral."

ISSUES IN SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY is the award-winning journal of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, the University of Texas at Dallas and Arizona State Universitywww.issues.org.

Contact:  Kevin Finneran, 202-641-1415  

 

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/make-technology-our-tool-not-our-master-300277220.html

SOURCE Issues in Science and Technology


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