Tools, Machines and Marvels

Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 38:159-176 (1995)
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Abstract

Technology, according to Derry and Williams's Short History, ‘comprises all that bewilderingly varied body of knowledge and devices by which man progressively masters his natural environment’. Their casual, and unconscious, sexism is not unrelated to my present topic. Women enter the story as spinners, burden bearers and, at long last, typists. ‘The tying of a bundle on the back or the dragging of it along upon the outspread twigs of a convenient branch are contributions [and by implication the only contributions] to technology which probably had a feminine origin’. Everything else was done by men, and what they did was master, conquer, and control. It is also significant that Derry and Williams take it for granted that ‘the men [sic] of the Old Stone Age, few and scattered, developed little to help them to conquer their environment’: until the advent of agriculture, and settled civilization, there was, they say, neither leisure nor surplus.

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Author's Profile

Stephen R. L. Clark
University of Liverpool

Citations of this work

Oswald Spengler, Technology, and Human Nature.Ian James Kidd - 2012 - The European Legacy 17 (1):19 - 31.

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References found in this work

New Essays on Human Understanding.Benson Mates - 1985 - Noûs 19 (2):306-308.
Minds, memes, and rhetoric.Stephen R. L. Clark - 1993 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 36 (1-2):3-16.

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