Technics and CivilizationHarcourt, Brace, 1934 - 495 pages |
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Page 30
... nature that cannot be studied without the " aid and intervening of mathematics , " Francis Bacon properly includes perspective , music , architecture , and engineering along with the sciences of astronomy and cosmography . The change in ...
... nature that cannot be studied without the " aid and intervening of mathematics , " Francis Bacon properly includes perspective , music , architecture , and engineering along with the sciences of astronomy and cosmography . The change in ...
Page 295
... Nature The historical revival of regionalism was re - enforced by another movement : the Return to Nature . The cultivation of nature for its own sake , and the pursuit of rural modes of living and the appreciation of the rural ...
... Nature The historical revival of regionalism was re - enforced by another movement : the Return to Nature . The cultivation of nature for its own sake , and the pursuit of rural modes of living and the appreciation of the rural ...
Page 329
Lewis Mumford. for us today nature is no longer an absolute : or rather , we no longer regard nature as if man himself were not implicated in her , and as if his modifications of nature were not themselves a part of the natural order to ...
Lewis Mumford. for us today nature is no longer an absolute : or rather , we no longer regard nature as if man himself were not implicated in her , and as if his modifications of nature were not themselves a part of the natural order to ...
Table des matières
OBJECTIVES | 3 |
CULTURAL PREPARATION | 9 |
The Monastery and the Clock | 12 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
A. N. Whitehead abstract achieve advance agriculture arts automatic basis became become capitalism capitalist civilization classes clock coal complete consumption created culture Deutsches Museum duction economic effect efficiency effort eighteenth century electric elements energy England environment esthetic Europe existence experience fact factory finally forms function glass habits handicraft horsepower human important improvements increased industry instruments interest invention inventor iron J. A. Hobson labor limited living London machine manufacture means mechanical ment merely metal methods miner mining modern technics motion motor movement nature neolithic neotechnic phase nineteenth century object operations organic original paleotechnic period paleotechnic phase perhaps phonograph physical picture possible primitive production profit railroad rational régime regions Roger Bacon routine scientific seventeenth century sixteenth century social society standard steam engine TECHNICS AND CIVILIZATION tended textile tion utilitarian utilization warfare Western World whole wood worker York