Notes from Chapter 15: Society and Technological Change

The ideas and examples referenced below are notes compiled by Robert Keel from his reading of Volti, Rudi. 2014. Society and Technological Change. 7th edition. New York, NY: Worth Publishers. They are intended for classroom use.

Weapons and Their Consequences

Some of our technology has led to human destruction rather than human progress.

Military Technology in the Ancient World

Military Technology and the Feudal Order

New Weapons and The Decline of Feudalism

The Gunpowder Revolution

War and the Centralized State

Technological Change and the Naval Battleship

Weapons and The Modern World

"You press a button and death flies down…How can there be writhing, mangled bodies? How can this air around you be filled with unseen projectiles? It is like listening to a radio account of a battle on the other side of the earth. It is too far away, too separated to hold reality…. In modern war one kills at distance, and in so doing he does not realize that he is killing." (Charles Lindbergh, in Volti page 302.)

Questions (pages 302-303):

  1. Can any equivalents of medieval knights be found today? In what ways do they resemble medieval warriors? How do the technologies they use shape their activities and attitudes?
  2. The use of gunpowder changed the nature of warfare and played a significant role in the transformation of European society. Yet in China, its land of origin, gunpowder did not have this effect. Why do you think this was so? Can you think of any possible differences between medieval Europe and traditional China that might have been responsible for their different experiences?
  3. To make effective use of firearms, soldiers had to be well-drilled and subjected to rigid discipline. How have military models of organization influenced non-military social institutions? What are the advantages and disadvantages of military styles of organization when they are applied elsewhere?
  4. For all of its horrors, war has historically provided opportunities for people to demonstrate some real virtues, such as resourcefulness, initiative, and courage. Have modern military technologies made these virtues irrelevant? If so, does the loss of these virtues make war more absurd than ever before?
  5. To what extent, if any, should an engineer feel a sense of individual responsibility for designing a weapon that is used to kill large numbers of people? What about the combatant who is ordered to use the weapon? Do the citizens whose taxes were used to design and build the weapon also bear some responsibility?

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Chapter 16

URL: http://www.umsl.edu/~keelr/280/soctechchange/soctech15.htm
Owner: Robert O. Keel: rok@umsl.edu
Last Updated: Wednesday, April 6, 2016 9:01