“I am increasingly convinced that technological culture is the entire root of women's liberation.”
Lois McMaster Bujold (1949) Science Fiction and fantasy author from the USA
"Putting It Together" p. 8
The Vorkosigan Companion (2008)
Twitter post https://twitter.com/McCormickProf/status/947851434816655361 (1 January 2018) <br class="br">2018
“I am increasingly convinced that technological culture is the entire root of women's liberation.”
Lois McMaster Bujold (1949) Science Fiction and fantasy author from the USA
"Putting It Together" p. 8
The Vorkosigan Companion (2008)
Albert Hofmann (1906–2008) Swiss chemist
Foreword
LSD : My Problem Child (1980)
Context: I share the belief of many of my contemporaries that the spiritual crisis pervading all spheres of Western industrial society can be remedied only by a change in our world view. We shall have to shift from the materialistic, dualistic belief that people and their environment are separate, toward a new consciousness of an all-encompassing reality, which embraces the experiencing ego, a reality in which people feel their oneness with animate nature and all of creation.
Kurt Gödel (1906–1978) logician, mathematician, and philosopher of mathematics
As quoted in Logical Dilemmas : The Life and Work of Kurt Gödel (1997) by John W. Dawson Jr.
George Horne (1730–1792) English churchman, writer and university administrator
Olla Podrida, No. 7 http://books.google.com/books?id=JSkTAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA133, Saturday, August 18. 1787 <br class="br">Prose Quotations from Socrates to Macaulay, 1880
Jim Cummins (professor) (1949) professor at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto
Language and the Human Spirit (2003)
Allen W. Wood (1942) academic
Kantian Ethics (2008)
Ivan Illich (1926–2002) austrian philosopher and theologist
Silence is a Commons (1982)
Context: The issue which I propose for discussion should therefore be clear: how to counter the encroachment of new, electronic devices and systems upon commons that are more subtle and more intimate to our being than either grassland or roads — commons that are at least as valuable as silence. Silence, according to western and eastern tradition alike, is necessary for the emergence of persons. It is taken from us by machines that ape people. We could easily be made increasingly dependent on machines for speaking and for thinking, as we are already dependent on machines for moving.
Thomas Sowell (1930) American economist, social theorist, political philosopher and author
"The Scapegoat for Strife in the Black Community" http://www.nationalreview.com/article/420807/slavery-didnt-cause-todays-black-problems-welfare-did (7 July 2015), National Review <br class="br">2010s