Article ID: CBB673435840

Technoscientific control of nature: The ultimate paradox (2021)

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The current interlinked environmental and socioeconomic global crises constitute the gravest threat to humanity's well-being, indeed survival, today. Studies of the historical roots and contemporary manifestations of the various elements of these crises—including accelerating environmental degradation, unfettered capitalist technoscientific/industrial expansion, overpopulation, and overconsumption—are plentiful. Also well-known is the influence of Francis Bacon's writings, particularly The Advancement of Learning (1605), Novum Organon (1620), and the utopian New Atlantis (1627), on the development of empiricism and the modern scientific method as well as the reform and organization of scientific research. Bacon's significance for the founding of the Royal Society of London (1660) and for the plan and structure of the Encyclopedie (1751–1772), coupled with his oft-cited aphoristic injunctions to study nature to control/dominate it, are staples in the lore and justification of technoscience. I argue that the enduring appeal of so-called Baconianism derives, in part, from a fundamental misappropriation of certain of Bacon's original ideas. Specifically, the complex ethical and religious framework within which Bacon situated his vision of scientific and technological development was discarded (or ignored) so that, by the early decades of the 18th century, Baconianism had come to be understood almost exclusively for its utilitarian role in society. This deracinated version became the familiar trope of technoscience's unlimited potential to transform nature (including human nature and behavior) in the service of an ideology of industrial/consumerist expansion since then. Linkage between the history of science/technology and addictive consumerism, apparent by the close of the 19th century, has been insufficiently examined. Such addictive consumerist behavior and continued virtually unregulated industrialization and production, were effectively removed from ethical scrutiny and a high degree of material acquisition and personal/societal rapaciousness became the norm rather than the exception in most countries. I suggest that further historical deconstruction of this denuded Baconianism will yield important insights in the search for viable solutions to the present global socioenvironmental crises.

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Article Graham W. Pickren; Wade E. Pickren (2021) Signposts to decolonial futures in understanding and addressing our present crises. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences (pp. 315-318). unapi

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Authors & Contributors
Jørgensen, Finn Arne
Christoff, Peter
Clements, Kendrick A.
Corneanu, Sorana
Friedel, Robert D.
James, Susan
Journals
Ethics, Place and Environment
Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences
Contemporary European History
Environmental History
Australian Journal of Politics and History
Science, Technology, and Human Values
Publishers
University Press of Kansas
Ashgate
University of Chicago Press
University of North Carolina Press
University of Washington Press
Yale University Press
Concepts
Environmentalism
Consumers and consumerism
Science and ethics
Climate change
Environmental sciences
Recycling (waste disposal)
People
Bacon, Francis, 1st Baron Verulam
Boyle, Robert
Foucault, Michel
Hoover, Herbert
Locke, John
Reade, William Winwood
Time Periods
20th century
21st century
20th century, late
20th century, early
17th century
19th century
Places
United States
Norway
Rocky Mountains (U.S.)
Colorado (U.S.)
Wisconsin (U.S.)
Australia
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