Tools for ConvivialityHarper & Row, 1973 - 110 頁 |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 21 筆
第 26 頁
... physical , psychological , and social processes . The illusion that a high culture is one that uses the highest possible quantities of energy must be overcome if we are to get tools into focus . In classical societies power sources were ...
... physical , psychological , and social processes . The illusion that a high culture is one that uses the highest possible quantities of energy must be overcome if we are to get tools into focus . In classical societies power sources were ...
第 27 頁
... physical power available to old societies can be estimated . It can be expressed in multiples of the average man's working time and metabolic energy . He can burn 2,500 calories a day , four - fifths of them just to stay alive . They go ...
... physical power available to old societies can be estimated . It can be expressed in multiples of the average man's working time and metabolic energy . He can burn 2,500 calories a day , four - fifths of them just to stay alive . They go ...
第 28 頁
... physical power , and the control of power depended entirely on authority . Equal power and equal direct control of power were both features of preindustrial societies , but this did not guarantee an equal autonomy in the exercise of ...
... physical power , and the control of power depended entirely on authority . Equal power and equal direct control of power were both features of preindustrial societies , but this did not guarantee an equal autonomy in the exercise of ...
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常見字詞
ability affluence balance of learning basic become better bureaucratic cars CIDOC claim commodities compulsory consumer consumption convivial society convivial tools corporations cost Counterfoil research created crisis Cuernavaca culture decisions define demands depends destructive doctors dustrial effective efficiency energy engineering environment equally Erich Fromm expect formal structure FRED HOYLE freedom frustration growing growth human ical ideology illusion increase individual industrial mode industrial society inversion IVAN ILLICH knowledge labor language limits limits to growth machines major institutions man's manipulation marginal utility means medicine mode of production modern nature operate organized output overefficiency participatory justice physical population postindustrial present privilege procedure professional protection purpose radical monopoly range recognize result rich ritual RUTH NANDA ANSHEN SARVEPALLI RADHAKRISHNAN scientific second watershed speed survival tion tive TOOLS FOR CONVIVIALITY transportation vehicles vivial Werner Heisenberg World Perspectives