The technological imperative in Canada
an intellectual history
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Word Count
81,750 words, Guess
Page Count
327 pages
Identifiers
- ISBN-100774816503
- ISBN-139780774816502
- Library of Congress Control Number2010286638
- OCLC Control Number300582807
- Better World Books9780774816502
and 1 more
- Open LibraryOL25342889M
Classifications
- DDC601
- DDC303.48/30971
- LCCT14.5 .F677 2009
and 1 more
- LCCT14 .F73 2009
Description
Technology is and has always been the subject of critical debate. This wide-ranging, engaging book examines the ideas of Anglo-Canadian theorists who saw technology as a new imperative that would either enhance or threaten the moral imperative. From the mid-nineteenth century onward, advocates argued that techno-logy, as a moral force, would strengthen the ties that bound Canada to Britain and Western civilization, while opponents saw technology as a source of American power that threatened Canadian independence. The Technological Imperative in Canada offers new insights into the ideas of influential Canadian theorists of technology such as Harold Innis and Marshall McLuhan and introduces readers to the ideas and perceptions of lesser-known but key figures such as Sandford Fleming, Stephen Leacock, and E.J. Pratt. This seminal book revises the entrenched notion that Anglo-Canadian thought has been dominated by the moral imperative.
Subjects
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