In their excellent book Hubris and Hybrids, historians Mikael Hard and Andrew Jamison engage in a cultural assessment of science and technology. They replace the traditional 'heroic tale' of scientific genius with stories of the frequently mixed blessings of science and technology. -- Nature
These new stories of science and social movements, machine-breaking, environmentalism, and the politics of development lay the groundwork for a bold and much needed cultural assessment of technology and science. -- Thomas Misa, author of Leonardo to the Internet: Technology andCulture from the Renaissance to the Present
Hard and Jamison have written a history of modern science and technology with a fresh perspective. Along with the play of ideas that captured the interest of an older generation of historians they have focused their narrative on current concerns -- 'knowledge that could actually be applied for the benefit of man.' It is a tour de force of science writing. -- Harold Dorn, co-author of Science and Technology in World History
Hubris and Hybrids is an extremely important book for opening the debate on technology, democracy, science and society, knowledge and responsibility in a period when technology and science are reengineering the earth and our lives. -- Vandana Shiva, author of Stolen Harvest:The Hijacking of the Global Food Supply
Hubris and Hybrids is a wise and broadly synthetic work that brings coherence to a tremendous amount of historical research on scientific technology. -- Jeffrey C. Alexander, co-editor of Cultural Trauma and CollectiveIdentity
Highly Recommended. -- CHOICE
Far from being a critique of the excesses of only modern science and technology, Hubris and Hybrids is an extremely wide-ranging historical survey. Its coverage begins with the Scientific Revolution, Britain's Industrial Revolution, and the Enlightenment. More modern topics include technocracy movements, artistic uses of science and technology from William Morris to the film The Matrix, appropriate technology, the greening of corporate America and Europe, film and industrial design, and Asian developments. The richness of the authors' observations on these historical phenomena is exemplified by their comments on the medieval period: eyeglasses and mirrors created opportunities to experience a technically mediated reality. -- Nature
Hard and Jamison wisely offer no simple historical lessons, much less any silly predictions. What they provide instead are provocative and perceptive reflections that deserve to reach a wide general audience. -- Nature
Hard and Jamison, have published an ambitious and necessary book about the history of technology. -- Thomas Hylland Eriksen, Sydsvenska dagbladet
In their excellent book Hubris and Hybrids, historians Mikael Hard and Andrew Jamison engage in a cultural assessment of science and technology. They replace the traditional 'heroic tale' of scientific genius with stories of the frequently mixed blessings of science and technology. -- Nature
These new stories of science and social movements, machine-breaking, environmentalism, and the politics of development lay the groundwork for a bold and much needed cultural assessment of technology and science. -- Thomas Misa, author of Leonardo to the Internet: Technology and Culture from the Renaissance to the Present
Hard and Jamison have written a history of modern science and technology with a fresh perspective. Along with the play of ideas that captured the interest of an older generation of historians they have focused their narrative on current concerns -- 'knowledge that could actually be applied for the benefit of man.' It is a tour de force of science writing. -- Harold Dorn, co-author of Science and Technology in World History
Hubris and Hybrids is an extremely important book for opening the debate on technology, democracy, science and society, knowledge and responsibility in a period when technology and science are reengineering the earth and our lives. -- Vandana Shiva, author of Stolen Harvest: The Hijacking of the Global Food Supply
Hubris and Hybrids is a wise and broadly synthetic work that brings coherence to a tremendous amount of historical research on scientific technology. -- Jeffrey C. Alexander, co-editor of Cultural Trauma and Collective Identity
Highly Recommended. -- CHOICE
Far from being a critique of the excesses of only modern science and technology, Hubris and Hybrids is an extremely wide-ranging historical survey. Its coverage begins with the Scientific Revolution, Britain's Industrial Revolution, and the Enlightenment. More modern topics include technocracy movements, artistic uses of science and technology from William Morris to the film The Matrix, appropriate technology, the greening of corporate America and Europe, film and industrial design, and Asian developments. The richness of the authors' observations on these historical phenomena is exemplified by their comments on the medieval period: eyeglasses and mirrors created opportunities to experience a technically mediated reality. -- Nature
Hard and Jamison wisely offer no simple historical lessons, much less any silly predictions. What they provide instead are provocative and perceptive reflections that deserve to reach a wide general audience. -- Nature
Hard and Jamison, have published an ambitious and necessary book about the history of technology. -- Thomas Hylland Eriksen, Sydsvenska dagbladet