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Vanderburg, Willem H. – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2009
High levels of specialization have created knowledge with little or no "peripheral vision," and the resulting "blind spots" are causing many "collisions" with human life, society, and the biosphere. Each discipline and specialty must be equipped with a "map" showing its connections to everything else, but especially the negative consequences that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science and Society, Specialization, Environment
Vanderburg, Willem H. – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2008
The strengths and weaknesses of current energy planning can be attributed to the limited economic, social, and environmental contexts taken into account as a result of the current intellectual and professional division of labor. A preventive approach is developed by which the ratio of desired to undesired effects can be substantially improved. It…
Descriptors: Sustainable Development, Energy, Conservation (Environment), Science and Society
Vanderburg, Willem H. – Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society, 2006
Contemporary civilization has created a fundamental contradiction between the intellectual approach to knowing and the technical approach to doing on the one hand, and the results of their application on the other. These approaches to knowing and doing begin with a process of abstraction that trades breadth for depth, while their application…
Descriptors: Science and Society, Technology, Futures (of Society), Technological Advancement
Vanderburg, Willem H. – Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society, 2006
The hydrogen economy is a technological bluff in its implied assurance that, despite the accelerating pace at which we are depleting the remaining half of our fossil fuels, our energy future is secure. Elementary thermodynamic considerations are developed to show that a hydrogen economy is about as feasible as a perpetual motion machine. Hydrogen…
Descriptors: Thermodynamics, Economics, Energy, Energy Management
Vanderburg, Willem H. – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2007
Our knowledge "system" is built up from disciplines and specialties as its components, which are "wired" by patterns of collaboration that constitute its organization. The intellectual autonomy of these components prevents this knowledge system from adequately accounting for what we have gradually discovered during the past 50 years: In human…
Descriptors: Cognitive Structures, Intellectual Disciplines, Scientific and Technical Information, Science and Society
Vanderburg, Willem H. – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2007
What is the likelihood of controlling technology by means of the law? In traditional societies, the law was deeply embedded in, and dependent on, culture (the totality of human creations for making sense of and living in the world). Industrialization required a complete restructuring of both technology and society, thus engulfing all traditions in…
Descriptors: Legal Responsibility, Laws, Relationship, Science and Society
Vanderburg, Willem H. – Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society, 2006
This second part continues the search for ways of overcoming the three limitations of the current intellectual and professional division of labor and its knowledge infrastructure, which were shown to be at the root of the present economic, social and environmental crises. A complementary knowledge strategy is proposed to counterbalance the trade…
Descriptors: Industrialization, Technological Advancement, Social Sciences, Science and Society
Vanderburg, Willem H. – Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society, 2006
The role tradition played in preindustrial societies has been supplanted by the decisions of countless specialists organized by means of an intellectual and professional division of labor shaping a knowledge infrastructure that sustains these decisions. Three limitations of this knowledge system are discussed: (a) on the macrolevel, it imposes an…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Social Sciences, Science and Society, Decision Making