Technology is a friend, but mostly a dangerous enemy that intrudes into a culture changing everything while destroying the vital sources of our humanity.
-Neil Postman
Neil Postman is the chair of the Department of
Culture and Communications and professor of media ecology at New York
University. Postman graduated with a B.S. from SUNY Freedonia, a M.A.
and Ph.D. from Columbia.
Postman argues that traditional education can create a rapport
between student and teacher that is conducive to learning: radio,,
movies, television, computers are all useful to teach us, but they
are not a substitute for what has to happen between a teacher and a
student for us to claim education has occurred.
Neil Postman has written a 18 books, one of which is
Technopoly: The Surrender of Culture to Technology (1992).
In Technopoly (by this he means progress without
limits rights without responsibilities
technology without cost and a moral center replaced by
efficiency, interest and economic advance), Postman states that
with the exception of the electric light, there has never been
a technology that better exemplifies Marshall McLuhans aphorism
the medium is the message The computer is almost all
process, there are, for example, no great computers, as there are
great writers, painters, or musicians. This is, too me, a perfect
indication of Postmans philosophies. What about the wonder of
great programs, there are many powerful learning devices on the
computer......
Postman classifies cultures into three categories: tool-using,
technologies, and technopolies. He contends that all three are
currently found somewhere on the planet although the tool-using
culture is disappearing.
The upside to Postmans rants is that he forces us to think
about technology and its costs versus the benefit, in addition, he
forces us to ask many questions about the use of
technology.
Publications
The End of EducationTechnopoly
Amusing Ourselves to Death
Conscientious Objections
The Disappearance of Childhood
Teaching as aSubversive Activity (with Charles Weingartner)