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Authority, Liberty, and Automatic Machinery in Early Modern Europe

Otto Mayr
Barcode 9780801839399
Paperback

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Release Date: 26/09/1989

Genre: Society & Culture
Sub-Genre: Social Sciences
Label: Johns Hopkins University Press
Series: Johns Hopkins Studies in the History of Technology
Language: English
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press

''Original and delightful . [Mayr's] persuasive and beautifully written book is reminiscent of Max Weber and The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism.''--American Historical Review.


Perhaps never in history has society been so fascinated with a single machine as when, in early modern Europe, the clock evolved into a major cultural image, widely used in literature, science, and especially Cartesian philosophy. Yet in England, there was greater interest in a different class of technology-the feedback device, such as the safety valve on a steam engine, that could control itself internally;self-regulating systems were hallmarks not only of practical technology but also of the abstract theories of Newton and Adam Smith.

Otto Mayr, the director of Germany's leading technological museum, explores the relationship between machinery, technological thought, and culture. Contrasting England and the Continent, particularly in the eighteenth century, he uncovers a stikring pattern of technological metaphors applied to political systems-and lays the foundations of a new intellectual history of technology