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Building a Bridge to the Eighteenth Century How the Past Can Improve Our Future

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ISBN-10: 0375401296

ISBN-13: 9780375401299

Edition: 1999

Authors: Neil Postman

List price: $25.00
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Description:

At a time when we are reexamining our values, reeling from the pace of change, witnessing the clash between good instincts and "pragmatism," dealing with the angst of a new millennium, Neil Postman, one of our most distinguished observers of contemporary society, provides for us a source of guidance and inspiration. In Building a Bridge to the Eighteenth Century he revisits the Enlightenment, that great flowering of ideas that provided a humane direction for the future -- ideas that formed our nation and that we would do well to embrace anew. He turns our attention to Goethe, Voltaire, Rousseau, Diderot, Kant, Edward Gibbon, Adam Smith, Thomas Paine, Jefferson, and Franklin, and to their…    
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Book details

List price: $25.00
Copyright year: 1999
Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Publication date: 9/21/1999
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 224
Size: 6.00" wide x 9.00" long x 1.25" tall
Weight: 0.880
Language: English

Born in Brooklyn, New York, and educated at the State University of New York and Columbia University, Neil Postman is a communications theorist, educator, and writer who has been deeply involved with the issue of the impact of the media and advanced communications technology on American culture. In his many books, Postman has strongly opposed the idea that technology will "save" humanity. In fact, he has focused on the negative ways in which television and computers alter social behavior. In his book Technopoly, Postman argues that the uncontrolled growth of technology destroys humanity by creating a culture with no moral structure. Thus, technology can be a dangerous enemy as well as a…    

Preclude
Introduction
A Bridge to the 18th Century
Progress
Technology
Language
Information
Narratives
Children
Democracy
Education
Letter from Lord Byron to Lord Holland, February 25, 1812
Comments on the Nature of Language by People Who Never Heard of Facques Derrida
On the Origin of Childhood and Why It Is Disappearing
Notes
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Index