Friday, November 22, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Aldous Huxley

« All quotes from this author
 

Technological progress has merely provided us with more efficient means for going backwards.
--
"Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow" in Adonis and the Alphabet (1956); later in Collected Essays (1959), p. 293

 
Aldous Huxley

» Aldous Huxley - all quotes »



Tags: Aldous Huxley Quotes, Technology Quotes, Authors starting by H


Similar quotes

 

Scientific and technological progress themselves are value-neutral. They are just very good at doing what they do. If you want to do selfish, greedy, intolerant and violent things, scientific technology will provide you with by far the most efficient way of doing so. But if you want to do good, to solve the world's problems, to progress in the best value-laden sense, once again, there is no better means to those ends than the scientific way.

 
Richard Dawkins
 

The progress thus procured has been only technical: it has provided more efficient means for satisfying preexistent desires, rather than modified the quality of human purposes. There is, for example, no modern civilization which is the equal of Greek culture in all respects. Science is still too recent to have been absorbed into imaginative and emotional disposition. Men move more swiftly and surely to the realization of their ends, but their ends too largely remain what they were prior to scientific enlightenment. This fact places upon education the responsibility of using science in a way to modify the habitual attitude of imagination and feeling, not leave it just an extension of our physical arms and legs.

 
John Dewey
 

By putting the means of production into the hands of the masses but withholding from those same masses any ownership over the product of their work, Web 2.0 provides an incredibly efficient mechanism to harvest the economic value of the free labor provided by the very, very many and concentrate it into the hands of the very, very few.

 
Nicholas G. Carr
 

People who want a cure, provided they can have it without pain, are like those who favour progress, provided they can have it without change.

 
Anthony de Mello
 

Futurologists have been multiplying like flies since the day Herman Kahn made Cassandra's profession "scientific," yet somehow not one of them has come out with the clear statement that we have wholly abandoned ourselves to the mercy of technological progress. The roles are now reversed: humanity becomes, for technology, a means, an instrument for achieving a goal unknown and unknowable.

 
Stanislaw Lem
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact