翻訳と辞書
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・ The Myth of Mars and Venus
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・ The Myth of Persecution
・ The Myth of Prometheus (Piero di Cosimo)
・ The Myth of Rock
・ The Myth of Sisyphus
・ The Myth of the American Sleepover
・ The Myth of the American Superhero
・ The Myth of the Blood
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The Myth of the Machine
・ The Myth of the One Percent
・ The Myth of the Plan
・ The Myth of the Rational Voter
・ The Myth of the Twentieth Century
・ The Myth of the Vaginal Orgasm
・ The Mythe
・ The Mythic Circle
・ The Mythical Detective Loki Ragnarok
・ The Mythical Man-Month
・ The Mythology Class
・ The Mythology of All Races
・ The Myths and Legends of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table
・ The Myvyrian Archaiology of Wales
・ The Mézga Family


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The Myth of the Machine : ウィキペディア英語版
The Myth of the Machine

''The Myth of the Machine'' is a two-volume book taking an in-depth look at the forces that have shaped modern technology since prehistoric times. The first volume, ''Technics and Human Development'', was published in 1967, followed by the second volume, ''The Pentagon of Power'', in 1970. The author, Lewis Mumford, shows the parallel developments between human tools and social organization mainly through language and rituals.〔Mumford (1970, 12).〕 It is considered a synthesis of many theories Mumford developed throughout his prolific writing career. Volume 2 was a Book-of-the-Month Club selection.〔http://www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~immer/books1970s〕
==Megamachine==
"In ''The Myth of the Machine'', Mumford insisted upon the reality of the megamachine: the convergence of science, technics and political power as a unified community of interpretation rendering useless and eccentric life-enhancing values. Subversion of this authoritarian kingdom begins with that area of human contact with the world that cannot be successfully repressed - one's feelings about one's self."〔Lewis Freid, ''Makers of the City'', Univ Massachusetts Press, 1990. p. 115〕
In the Prologue, Mumford defines his purpose here as "to question both the assumptions and the predictions upon which our commitment to the present forms of scientific and technical progress, treated as ends in themselves, have been based."
Mumford dates the emergence of the "Machine" from the pyramid age (primarily with reference to Egypt, but also acknowledging other ancient cultures in that era which produced massive and precisely engineered structures). He uses the term 'Megamachine' to describe the social and bureaucratic structure that enabled a ruler to coordinate a huge workforce to undertake vast and complex projects. Where the projects were public works such as irrigation systems and canals or the construction of cities, Mumford referred to the "labour machine", and where they involved conquest he used the expression "military machine". The term "Megamachine" connoted the social structure in its entirety.
William Manson writes that Mumford differed from other major critics of technology in that "() emphasized that the ultimate function of social structures (“society”) should be to enhance individual development and mutually beneficial patterns of social cooperation. Living in such conducive, humanly-scaled communities, individuals could develop their many-sided capacities (moral/empathic, cognitive, aesthetic, etc.). Technical means, if limited to these human purposes and values, could enhance such growth and social well-being." 〔Footnote: Manson writes that "this is a humanist vision shared also by such previous thinkers as W. von Humboldt, J. S. Mill, and even Marx & Engels (“the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all”)."〕 Manson describes the dystopian vision of the future that Mumford warned of:
:"The beleaguered– even 'obsolete'–individual would be entirely de-skilled, reduced to a passive, inert, 'trivial accessory to the machine.' Technical surveillance and limitless data-collection—'an all-seeing eye' (Panopticon)—would monitor every 'individual on the planet. Ultimately, the totalitarian technocracy, centralizing and augmenting its 'power-complex,' ignoring the real needs and values of human life, might produce a world 'fit only for machines to live in'”〔William Manson, ( Homo Technomorphis - The Relevance of Lewis Mumford ), ''CounterPunch'', 2014.03.21〕

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