184 Pages
by
Routledge
180 Pages
by
Routledge
180 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
In 1749 Jean-Jacques Rousseau's Discourse on the Arts and Sciences , surprised leading Enlightenment thinkers who had enthusiastically upheld the positive benefits of humanity's technological advance. Voltaire, who celebrated the ends of civilization, mocked Rousseau's praise for an original creative state of nature in which man enjoyed an optimum level of freedom. Given the unprecedented... Read more
1: Information Ethics: A Critical Assessment; 2: Teaching Values in Computing Courses through Theory and Practice; 3: Problems of Technology; 4: Human Nature Unbound: Why Becoming Cyborgs and Taking Drugs Could Make Us More Human 1; 5: Natural Rightism and the Biogenetic Debate; 6: Taking Life: Science-Based Justifications in the Third Reich; 7: Do the Facts Matter? The Politicization of Science and the Betrayal of the American Trust; 8: Recommitting vs. Selling Out: The Subtle Industrial Revolution among the Amish of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania; 9: Technology, Tribes, and Environmental Racism: From Techno-Oppression to Tribal Sovereignty; 10: A Recession in the Economy of Trust 1
Biography
James Burk






