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The Labyrinth of Technology: A Preventive Technology and Economic Strategy as a Way Out [Hardcover]

Willem H. Vanderburg
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 75.00
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Book Description

Nov 1 2000

Why does modern technology succeed so brilliantly in some respects and simultaneously fail in others? While he was completing a doctoral thesis in mechanical engineering in the late 60s and early 70s, Willem Vanderburg became convinced that the environmental crisis and the possible limits to growth would require a fundamental change in the engineering, management and regulation of technology.

In this volume he exposes the limitations of conventional approaches in these fields. Modern societies urgently need to rethink the intellectual division of labour in science and technology and the corresponding organization of the university, corporation, and government in order to get out of a self-destructive pattern where problems are first created by some than then dealt with by others, making it almost impossible to get to the roots of anything. The result is what he calls the labyrinth of technology, a growing patchwork of compensations that merely displace and transform problems from one place to another. The author's diagnosis suggests the remedy: a new, preventive strategy that situates technological and economic growth in its human, societal, and biospheric contexts, and calls for a synthesis of methods in engineering, management, and public policy, and of approaches in the social sciences and humanities. He also suggests that this same synthesis can be applied in medicine, law, social work, and other professions.

The Labyrinth of Technology is a unique and invaluable text for students, academics and laypersons in all disciplines, and speaks to those who are torn between the benefits that modern technology provides and the difficulties it creates in our individual and collective lives.


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About the Author

Willem H. Vanderburg is the director of the Centre for Technology and Social Development at the University of Toronto. He was a NATO post-doctoral fellow under Jacques Ellul from 1973 to 1978 at the University of Bordeaux.


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Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Important concepts and ideas, presented poorly Nov 5 2003
Format:Paperback
I appreciate the importance of professor Vanderburg's work and class, but feel that this textbook is neither the most effective nor the most encouraging method of sharing his message. The book is a struggle to get through, with the heavy vocabulary, endless numbers of examples and analogies, and oftentimes confusing structure. On many occasions I found myself having to re-read pages and entire sections while trying to uncover the core concepts of the book. This is of course a textbook directed at his students, so if you are not one of them, stay away unless you are extremely eager to read the over 400 pages with the book in one hand, a notebook in the other and a large pot of coffee nearby, as this would be the only effective way of understanding and retaining anything from it.
If this book is ever revised, I would suggest that professor Vanderburg do a quick review of The Elements of Style, most importantly Rule 17: Omit Needless Words and Rule 16 (An Approach to Style): Be Clear.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A book every engineering graduate should read Nov 21 2002
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
After reading countless engineering textbooks about the most minute of topics I finally have an opportunity to read about engineering outside of its usual specialized context. Finally an engineer who isn't afraid to talk about some of the problems in engineering curriculum.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Too wordy Feb 18 2001
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
The book seriously suffers from wordiness and repetitivness, this book can be sumed up with a few sentences.
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