Dimensions
140 x 214 x 25mm
A Century of Vital Debate About Machines, Systems and the Human World.
Technology was the blessing and the bane of the twentieth century. Human life span nearly doubled in the West, but in no century were more human beings killed by new technologies of war. Improvements in agriculture now feed increasing billions, but pesticides and chemicals threaten to poison the earth. Does technology improve us or diminish us? Enslave us or make us free?
With his first-ever collection of the essential twentieth-century writings on technology, Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Richard Rhodes explores the optimism, ambivalence, and wrongheaded judgments with which Americans have faced an ever-shifting world.
The book collects writings on events from the Great Exposition of 1900 and the invention of the telegraph to the advent of genetic counselling and the defeat of Garry Kasparov by IBM's chess-playing computer, Deep Blue. Its gems of opinion and history include Henry Ford on the horseless carriage, Robert Caro on the transformation of New York City, J Robert Oppenheimer on science and war, Loretta Lynn on the Pill and much more. Together, they chronicle an unprecedented century of change.
The book also includes selections from Margaret Sanger, Thorstein Veblen, Charles Lindbergh, Edward O Wilson, Norbert Wiener, Frederick Winslow Taylor, Kurt Vennegut Jr, and B F Skinner.