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Technics and Civilization

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ISBN-10: 015688254X

ISBN-13: 9780156882545

Edition: 1963

Authors: Lewis Mumford, Lewis Mumford

List price: $24.00
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Description:

This is a history of the machine and a critical study of its effects on civilization. Mumford has drawn on every aspect of life to explain the machine and to trace its social results. "An extraordinarily wide-ranging, sensitive, and provocative book about a subject upon which philosophers have so far shed but little light" (Journal of Philosophy). Index; illustrations.
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Book details

List price: $24.00
Copyright year: 1963
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Publication date: 11/15/1963
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 544
Size: 5.50" wide x 8.00" long x 1.25" tall
Weight: 1.232
Language: English

Lewis Mumford has been referred to as one of the twentieth century's most influential "public intellectuals." A thinker and writer who denied the narrowness of academic speciality, Mumford embraced a cultural analysis that integrated technology, the natural environment, the urban environment, the individual, and the community. Although he lacked a formal university degree, Mumford wrote more than 30 books and 1,000 essays and reviews, which established his "organic" analysis of modern culture. His work defined the interdisciplinary studies movement, especially American studies; urban studies and city planning; architectural history; history of technology; and, most important in the present…    

List of Illustrations
Introduction
Objectives
Cultural Preparation
Machines, Utilities, and "The Machine"
The Monastery and the Clock
Space, Distance, Movement
The Influence of Capitalism
From Fable to Fact
The Obstacle of Animism
The Road Through Magic
Social Regimentation
The Mechanical Universe
The Duty to Invent
Practical Anticipations
Agents of Mechanization
The Profile of Technics
De Re Metallica
Mining and Modern Capitalism
The Primitive Engineer
From Game-Hunt to Man-Hunt
Warfare and Invention
Military Mass-Production
Drill and Deterioration
Mars and Venus
Consumptive Pull and Productive Drive
The Eotechnic Phase
Technical Syncretism
The Technological Complex
New Sources of Power
Trunk, Plank, and Spar
Through a Glass, Brightly
Glass and the Ego
The Primary Inventions
Weakness and Strength
The Paleotechnic Phase
England's Belated Leadership
The New Barbarism
Carboniferous Capitalism
The Steam Engine
Blood and Iron
The Destruction of Environment
The Degradation of the Worker
The Starvation of Life
The Doctrine of Progress
The Struggle for Existence
Class and Nation
The Empire of Muddle
Power and Time
The Esthetic Compensation
Mechanical Triumphs
The Paleotechnic Passage
The Neotechnic Phase
The Beginnings of Neotechnics
The Importance of Science
New Sources of Energy
The Displacement of the Proletariat
Neotechnic Materials
Power and Mobility
The Paradox of Communication
The New Permanent Record
Light and Life
The Influence of Biology
From Destruction to Conservation
The Planning of Population
The Present Pseudomorph
Compensations and Reversions
Summary of Social Reactions
The Mechanical Routine
Purposeless Materialism: Superfluous Power
Co-operation versus Slavery
Direct Attack on the Machine
Romantic and Utilitarian
The Cult of the Past
The Return to Nature
Organic and Mechanical Polarities
Sport and the "Bitch-goddess"
The Cult of Death
The Minor Shock-Absorbers
Resistance and Adjustment
Assimilation of the Machine
New Cultural Values
The Neutrality of Order
The Esthetic Experience of the Machine
Photography as Means and Symbol
The Growth of Functionalism
The Simplification of the Environment
The Objective Personality
Orientation
The Dissolution of "The Machine"
Toward an Organic Ideology
The Elements of Social Energetics
Increase Conversion!
Economize Production!
Normalize Consumption!
Basic Communism
Socialize Creation!
Work for Automaton and Amateur
Political Control
The Diminution of the Machine
Toward a Dynamic Equilibrium
Summary and Prospect
Inventions
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Index