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Books > Professional & Technical > Technology: general issues > General
In this eye-opening book, author Lloyd J. Dumas argues that our
capacity for developing ever more powerful technologies and the
unavoidable fallibility of both machine and man will lead us
towards a disaster of an unprecedented scale. Most of us assume
that those in charge can always find a way to control any
technology mankind creates, no matter how powerful. But in a world
of imperfect human beings who are prone to error, emotion, and
sometimes to malevolent behavior, this could be an arrogant—and
disastrous—assumption. This book is filled with compelling,
factual stories that illustrate how easy it is for situations to go
terribly wrong, despite our best efforts to prevent any issue. The
author is not advocating an anti-technology "return to nature," nor
intending to highlight the marvels of our high-tech world. Instead,
the objective is to reveal the potential for disaster that
surrounds us in our modern world, elucidate how we arrived at this
predicament, explain the nature and ubiquity of human fallibility,
expose why proposed "solutions" to these Achilles heels cannot
work, and suggest alternatives that could thwart human-induced
technological disasters.
When our smartphones distract us, much more is at stake than a
momentary lapse of attention. Our use of smartphones can interfere
with the building-blocks of meaningfulness and the actions that
shape our self-identity. By analyzing social interactions and
evolving experiences, Roholt reveals the mechanisms of
smartphone-distraction that impact our meaningful projects and
activities. Roholt's conception of meaning in life draws from a
disparate group of philosophers - Susan Wolf, John Dewey, Hubert
Dreyfus, Martin Heidegger, and Albert Borgmann. Central to Roholt's
argument are what Borgmann calls focal practices: dinners with
friends, running, a college seminar, attending sporting events. As
a recurring example, Roholt develops the classification of musical
instruments as focal things, contending that musical performance
can be fruitfully understood as a focal practice. Through this
exploration of what generates meaning in life, Roholt makes us
rethink the place we allow smartphones to occupy in the everyday.
But he remains cautiously optimistic. This thoughtful, needed
interrogation of smartphones shows how we can establish a positive
role for technologies within our lives.
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