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A fourth theme, concerned with the quality of life, can be identified in the relationship between technology and society. There can be little doubt that technology has brought a higher standard of living to people in advanced countries, just as it has enabled a rapidly rising population to subsist in the developing countries. It is the prospect of rising living standards that makes the acquisition of technical competence so attractive to these countries. But however desirable the possession of a comfortable sufficiency of material goods, and the possibility of leisure for recreative purposes, the quality of a full life in any human society has other even more important prerequisites, such as the possession of freedom in a law-abiding community and of equality before the law. These are the traditional qualities of democratic societies, and it has to be asked whether technology is an asset or a liability in acquiring them. Certainly, highly illiberal regimes have used technological devices to suppress individual freedom and to secure obedience to the state: the nightmare vision of George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-four (1949), with its telescreens and sophisticated torture, has provided literary demonstration of this reality, should one be needed. But the fact that high technological competence requires, as has been shown, a high level of educational achievement by a significant proportion of the community holds out the hope that a society that is well educated will not long endure constraints on individual freedom and initiative that are not self-justifying. In other words, the high degree of correlation between technological success and educational accomplishment suggests a fundamental democratic bias about modern technology. It may take time to become effective, but, given sufficient time without a major political or social disruption and a consequent resurgence of national assertiveness and human selfishness, there are sound reasons for hoping that technology will bring the people of the world into a closer and more creative community.

Such, at least, must be the hope of anybody who takes a long view of the history of technology as one of the most formative and persistently creative themes in the development of humankind from the Paleolithic cave dwellers of antiquity to the dawn of the space age. Above all other perceptions of technology, the threshold of space exploration on which humankind stands provides the most dynamic and hopeful portent of human potentialities. Even while the threat of technological self-destruction remains ominous and the problems of population control and ecological imbalance cry out for satisfactory solutions, man has found a clue of his own future in terms of a quest to explore and colonize the depths of an infinitely fascinating universe. As yet, only a few visionaries have appreciated the richness of this possibility, and their projections are too easily dismissed as nothing more than imaginative science fiction. But in the long run, if there is to be a long run for our uniquely technological but willful species, the future depends upon the ability to acquire such a cosmic perspective, so it is important to recognize this now and to begin the arduous mental and physical preparations accordingly. The words of Arthur C. Clarke, one of the most perceptive of contemporary seers, in his Profiles of the Future (1962), are worth recalling in this context. Thinking ahead to the countless aeons that could stem from the remarkable human achievement summarized in the history of technology, he surmised that the all-knowing beings who may evolve from these humble beginnings may still regard our own era with wistfulness: “But for all that, they may envy us, basking in the bright afterglow of Creation; for we knew the Universe when it was young.”

Citation Information

Article Title: History of technology

Website Name: Encyclopaedia Britannica

Publisher: Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc.

Date Published: 05 January 2018

URL: https://www.britannica.com/technology/history-of-technology

Access Date: August 28, 2019

Additional Reading

The best general work is still Charles Singer et al. (eds.), A History of Technology, 5 vol. (1954–58, reprinted 1957–65), extended by Trevor I. Williams (ed.), with 2 vol. (1978) on the 20th century. The single-volume companion studies, T.K. Derry and Trevor I. Williams, A Short History of Technology from the Earliest Times to A.D. 1900 (1960, reissued 1970); and Trevor I. Williams, A Short History of Twentieth-Century Technology c. 1900–c. 1950 (1982), are valuable summaries. The French equivalent to these studies is Maurice Daumas (ed.), Histoire général des techniques, 5 vol. (1962–79), the first 3 vol. translated as A History of Technology and Invention: Progress Through the Ages (1969–79). The American counterpart to the British and French works, commendably stronger than both on the social relations of technology, is Melvin Kranzberg and Carroll W. Pursell, Jr. (eds.), Technology in Western Civilization, 2 vol. (1967). All these general works concentrate on Western technology.

A different and important perspective is presented in Joseph Needham, Science and Civilisation in China (1954– ), of which 6 vol. in 13 parts appeared to 1985. Good specialized works include Gordon Childe, What Happened in History, rev. ed. (1954, reissued 1982), a classic study of human mastery of the environment before the first civilizations; Henry Hodges, Technology in the Ancient World (1970, reprinted 1977); Lynn White, Jr., Medieval Technology and Social Change (1962, reissued 1980); Abbott Payson Usher, A History of Mechanical Inventions, rev. ed. (1954, reprinted 1962); and John Jewkes, David Sawers, and Richard Stillerman, The Sources of Invention, 2nd ed. (1969). Friedrich Klemm, A History of Western Technology (1959, reissued 1964; originally published in German, 1954), is a good selection of documents.

The economic and social implications of technological development are explored in W.H.G. Armytage, A Social History of Engineering, 4th ed. (1976); David S. Landes, The Unbound Prometheus: Technological Change and Industrial Development in Western Europe from 1750 to the Present (1969); and S. Lilley, Men, Machines and History: A Short History of Tools and Machines in Relation to Social Progress, rev. ed. (1965). Lewis Mumford, Technics and Civilization (1934, reissued 1963), remains a seminal essay.

R.J. Forbes, Man, the Maker: A History of Technology and Engineering (1950, reissued 1958), is a good outline of the history of technology; as is D.S.L. Cardwell, Technology, Science and History: A Short Study of the Major Developments in the History of Western Mechanical Technology and Their Relationships with Science and Other Forms of Knowledge (1972). R.A. Buchanan, Technology and Social Progress (1965), may be found useful as an introductory text.

Other relevant monographs include Charles Susskind, Understanding Technology (1973, reprinted 1975); A. Pacey, The Maze of Ingenuity: Ideas and Idealism in the Development of Technology (1974, reissued 1976); Bertrand Gille, The Renaissance Engineers (1967; originally published in French, 1964); Jean Gimpel, The Medieval Machine: The Industrial Revolution of the Middle Ages (1976, reissued 1979; originally published in French, 1975); Brooke Hindle, Emulation and Invention (1981, reissued 1983); and Nathan Rosenberg (ed.), The Economics of Technological Change: Selected Readings (1971). Eugene S. Ferguson, Bibliography of the History of Technology (1968), is a comprehensive and thorough study. More tentative appreciations of modern technology are Jacques Ellul, The Technological Society (1964, reissued 1973; originally published in French, 1954); and Arthur C. Clarke, Profiles of the Future (1962, reissued 1985).