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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper provides an overview of the views of Sachs, Postrel and Cowan regarding the social, political and ethical impacts of industrial development and technology. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MH11_MHTechSa.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
ethical and technological factors as they relate to human development. In fact, these theorists have related the impact of industrial development and technology on developed and developing countries, and
the social and ethical implications. Jeffrey Sachs, for example, considers the implications of technological change and development on Third World countries, and the social and ethical implications.
Focusing on the ethical obligation of developed nations to respond to the extreme poverty of many Third World countries, Sachs considers the implications of technological development in supporting this end.
Sachs considers this view and it can be related to the perspectives of a number of other authors in regards to the complex issues of supporting technological expansion in
the Third World. Owen and Darkwa (2003) considered the fact that there is a need in developing Third World countries to expand communication
options, and support has emerged for accelerating development through access to information and communication technology. Community/education oriented communication telecentres generally focus on meeting basic "technology" needs for rural communities,
including a focus on educational development that can allow for access to the varied untapped potential of a large urban workforce population (Owen and Darkwa, 2003). In the midst
of technological change, views of communication, education and technological change all relate to the concept of determinism and the way in which utility for these types of programs is determined.
Intel Chief Executive Officer Andrew Groves comment that "Our whole belief is that technology is good, and more is better.
How could we slow down technology..." is based in the belief that the introduction of technology is inherently beneficial, regardless of variations in a culture or existing structures that
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