Nature, Technology, and Society: Cultural Roots of the Current Environmental Crisis

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NYU Press, 1994 - 341 pages

Traces cultural attitudes toward the environment and technology across the span of human civilization

While all human societies have enlisted technologies to control nature, the last hundred years have witnessed the technological exploitation and destruction of natural resources on an unprecedented scale. As environmental groups and the scientific community sound the alarm about deforestation, global warming, and ozone depletion, the obvious question arises: how did we get where we are today? In Nature, Technology, and Society, Victor Ferkiss sets out to answer this central question, arguing that we cannot escape from our present environmental predicament unless we understand the ideas which have created it.

Ferkiss asks the basic questions concerning humans and their relationship to the environment. He traces cultural attitudes towards the environment from early mankind to the present day. This fascinating book is distinctive both in its comprehensiveness, and in its attempt to place side by side influential thinkers and movements with varied views on these issues.

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About the author (1994)

The late Victor Ferkiss was Professor Emeritus of Government, Georgetown University and the author of Technological Man and The Future of Technological Civilization.

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