Paul R. Josephson
人物简介:
Paul Josephson is the author of five other books, including Resources Under Regimes, Industrialized Nature, Red Atom, and New Atlantis Revisited: The Siberian City of Science.
Totalitarian Science and Technology (Second Edition)书籍相关信息
- ISBN:9781591023210
- 作者:Paul R. Josephson
- 出版社:Humanity Books
- 出版时间:2005
- 页数:181
- 价格:USD 21.98
- 纸张:暂无纸张
- 装帧:Paperback
- 开本:暂无开本
- 语言:暂无语言
- 适合人群:Academics, Political Scientists, History Buffs, Science and Technology Enthusiasts, Policy Analysts, and anyone interested in the impact of technology on society and governance.
- TAG:political science / History / Technology / Totalitarianism / Surveillance / Science Policy / Control
- 豆瓣评分:暂无豆瓣评分
- 更新时间:2025-05-18 19:06:13
内容简介:
What impact does politics have on the practice of scientists and engineers? In Totalitarian Science and Technology, Paul Josephson considers how physicists, biologists, and engineers have fared in totalitarian regimes. Adolph Hitler and Joseph Stalin relied on scientists and engineers to build the infrastructure of their states. The military power of their regimes was largely based on the discovery of physicists and biologists. They sought to use biology to transform nature, including their citizens, with murderous effect in Nazi Germany. They expected scientists to devote themselves entirely to the goals of the state, and were intolerant of deviation from state-sponsored programs and ideology. As a result, physicists, biologists, and engineers suffered from the consequences of ideological interference in their work. Many lost their jobs; others were arrested and disappeared in prisons. In physics, this meant rejection of the theory of relativity, in biology in the USSR, the rejection of modern-day genetics.
In this revised edition of Totalitarian Science and Technology, Josephson has included analysis of science and technology in such authoritarian regimes as North Korea, the People’s Republic of China, and Cuba. He argues that politics plays an important role in shaping research and development in all countries, but nowhere with greater risk to citizens and the environment than in closed political systems.
Students of European, Chinese, and Russian history, history of science and technology, and environmental history will find provocative and informative discussions in this book.