Fotografía de autor

Richard L. Currier

Autor de Unbound

13 Obras 217 Miembros 5 Reseñas

Obras de Richard L. Currier

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
male
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugares de residencia
Oceanside, California, USA
Educación
University of California, Berkeley (BA and PhD|social and cultural anthropology)
Ocupaciones
professor
Biografía breve
Richard L. Currier earned his BA and PhD in social and cultural anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley, and taught anthropology at Berkeley, the University of Minnesota, and the State University of New York. He coauthoreda ten-volume series on archeology for young adults and published numerous articles in scholarly journals and mainstream magazines. A pioneer in the design and development of interactive learning technologies, Currier has won numerous awards for his work. He lives in Oceanside, California. [from Unbound (2015)]

Miembros

Reseñas

 
Denunciada
Mustygusher | otra reseña | Dec 19, 2022 |
A study of how 8 various pivotal inventions or adaptations have changed the development of humans. While the first several chapters dwell on prehistory and physical anthropology, the later chapters focus on modern changes. The author has thoroughly footnoted all assertions and provides a deep bibliography. There is a plethora of mind-boggling statistics at the end which serve to impress the reader of the importance of working together to form a global fused economy and to help forestall both global warming and global freezing.
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Denunciada
LindaLeeJacobs | otra reseña | Feb 15, 2020 |
Currier is defining technology "as the deliberate modification of any natural object or substance with forethought to achieve a specific end or serve a specific purpose." Which this in mind, he lists eight technologies that have caused us to metamorphize gradually into the species that we are today, beginning with spears and digging sticks, which he believes promoted upright posture and bipedal locomotion, and finishes with the technology of digital information. He is well aware that not everyone agrees with his various theses, but they still make for thought-provoking reading.

Currier also points out some of the dire consequences that have accompanied our evolution, and have only gotten worse as we have more control over our environment and expanded our population: pollution, extinction, resource scarcities, etc. He points out how much fiction is in science fiction. We presently have no ability to transfer a significant population to another planet, which would require thousands of years of travel barring some unknown breakthrough. So far, building artificial environments independent of the natural biosphere have failed. He hopes that we will cleverly avoid disaster, but he doesn't count on it.

Everyone who reads this will probably take issue with one or more ideas, but it is very worth reading just for the thinking that it encourages. It has made me think much more deeply about things that I have taken for granted.

As a librarian, I am a little fearful that he is too optimistic that all of our information, such as that in books and on microfiche will be transferred onto the Internet, and I fear it may get lost. Many of my managers while I was still working believe in the "magic Internet," i.e., that in some mysterious yet concrete fashion all information is transferred into digital format without human intervention and all older formats can be discarded. The head of our IT division had great trouble understanding that information only got on the Internet if someone puts it there, and that costs work and money, neither of which he wanted to expend.

I also question his apparent belief that women and their work were highly valued in patriarchal cultures since societies became sedentary. He does point out that women lost their sexual freedom, but it seems to me that they lost more than that. A number of religions assure them that they are the cause of sin; they frequently had fewer civil rights than males; they often had no property rights, etc. Their work may have been important, but that doesn't mean that it was appreciated at its true worth. It is sadly easy to devalue work that one doesn't do.
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½
1 vota
Denunciada
PuddinTame | otra reseña | Jan 30, 2017 |
Contains b/w photographs and illustrations.

Text is geared towards young readers. More an introduction to Mosaic history than an indepth study.
 
Denunciada
velvetink | otra reseña | Mar 31, 2013 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
13
Miembros
217
Popularidad
#102,846
Valoración
½ 3.5
Reseñas
5
ISBNs
13

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