“The industrial-technological system may survive or it may break down. If it survives, it MAY eventually achieve a low level of physical and psychological suffering, but only after passing through a long and very painful period of adjustment and only at the cost of permanently reducing human beings and many other living organisms to engineered products and mere cogs in the social machine.”
"Introduction", item 2
Industrial Society and Its Future (1995)
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Theodore Kaczynski49
American domestic terrorist, mathematician and anarchist 1942Related quotes
Karl Popper book The Poverty of Historicism
The Poverty of Historicism (1957) Ch. 22 The Unholy Alliance with Utopianism
Garrett Hardin (1915–2003) American ecologist
Filters Against Folly (1985)
Harold Chestnut (1917–2001) American engineer
Source: Systems Engineering Tools, (1965), Systems Engineering Methods (1967), p. 13
Harold Chestnut (1917–2001) American engineer
Source: Systems Engineering Tools, (1965), Systems Engineering Methods (1967), p. 1: First paragraph of Ch. 1. The Environment for System Engineering Methods
Maurice Strong (1929–2015) Canadian businessman
Maurice Strong, September 1, 1997 edition of National Review magazine
Arthur James Balfour (1848–1930) British Conservative politician and statesman
Cheers.
Speech in Hanley (4 January 1910), quoted in The Times (5 January 1910), p. 7
Leader of the Opposition
Ted C. Lewellen (1940–2006) American writer
Political Anthropology: An Introduction (2003), p. 213