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The philosophy of technology assessment
pp. 201-226
Abstract
The emergence of the new culture of risk (Beck, 1986; Lagadec, 1981) is obviously tied to the technological innovations characteristic of our time and to the failure to rectify the environmental and social risks of contemporary techno-science. We have a long list indeed of crises associated with this culture of risk: accidents in nuclear, chemical, and armament industries, related as much to production as to transportation; the continuous pollution of the environment and vital products by chemical processes and substances; the propagation of acid rain; the growing deterioration of the ozone layer; the prospective climate changes due to global warming; the poverty, the hunger, and the permanent economic and social crises in the so-called Third World, where the greater part of the world's population lives, multiplying incessantly; the threat of the eventual employment of chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons in war.
Publication details
Published in:
Munvar Gonzalo (1996) Spanish studies in the philosophy of science. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 201-226
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-0305-0_10
Full citation:
Medina Manuel (1996) „The philosophy of technology assessment“, In: G. Munvar (ed.), Spanish studies in the philosophy of science, Dordrecht, Springer, 201–226.