Article ID: CBB021121481

Essay: Crisis: The Emergence of Another Hazardous Concept (April 2021)

unapi

There are three ways that technology may be woven into the pattern of history: as the basis for sustainability, for progress, and for crisis. Currently historians are exploring all three patterns. Their approaches relate in some degree to different audiences, which include not only other historians but also engineers, social scientists, policy makers, and the wider public. This essay focuses on the historical pattern of crisis, a concept that is currently evolving from the older idea of a sharply defined turning point to one of ongoing, ever-spreading centers of doom. Fear that history might become a series of technology-driven crises coexists with continuing enthusiasm about history as technology-driven progress. What needs more attention is the possibility of providing, through material and social means, a historical basis for sustainable security.

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Authors & Contributors
Cian O'Donovan
Taebi, Behnam
Alexis Mercado
Judith Sutz
Fisher, George C.
Cosmin Popan
Journals
Technology's Stories
Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society
Science, Technology and Human Values
Science as Culture
Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences
IEEE Technology and Society Magazine
Publishers
MIT Press
Springer
Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group
Johns Hopkins University Press
Berghahn Books
University of Washington
Concepts
Technology and society
Progress, ideas of
Sustainability
Technology
Technoscience; science and technology studies
History of technology, as a discipline
People
Reade, William Winwood
Time Periods
21st century
20th century
19th century
Early modern
Modern
20th century, late
Places
United States
London (England)
Latin America
Asia
Institutions
International Panel on Social Progress (IPSP)
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