The New Technology and Human ValuesJohn G. Burke |
Contents
Science Society and Human Values | 31 |
Education in a Technological Era | 63 |
AUTOMATIONA CREATION OF THE | 105 |
Copyright | |
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88th Congress achieve activity advance Aldous Huxley American applied areas automation B. F. Skinner basic become behavior believe Brave New World century completely computers consequences course cultural cybernation disease drugs economic effects effort engineering example experience fact factors Federal force future genetic growth human important increase individual industry institutions intellectual Joseph Wood Krutch kind knowledge labor learning leisure less Lewis Mumford lie detectors living machines man's means ment methods million modern moral natural selection nature Nazi Germany operations organization pen registers percent persons planning political polygraph population possible present problem production progress question recent require result scientific scientists social society Soviet student technical techniques technological change theory things thought thought reform tion unemployment University values W. T. Stace wiretapping workers