"In the early days of the machine age, the days when the amount of work done mechanically was small, it was not recognized that mechanization must lead to a new organization of work, a planning to which man himself would be forcibly subjected. But with the advance of technology, the consequences of increasing mechanization of work become more and more apparent. Not only are more and more men employed mechanically, but their work also becomes more and more specialized. To scientific specialization is added technical specialization. The growing specialization of the sciences, which creates artificial isolation and departmental walls, has its counterpart in technology as it breaks down and cuts up human work."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
ConservativesPoets from GermanyEssayists from GermanyNovelists from GermanyPhilosophers from Germany
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Ch. XIII
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Friedrich_Georg_J%C3%BCnger
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Friedrich Georg Jünger
25 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Friedrich Georg Jünger →
Related Quotes
"The tale becomes utopian only when the writer leaves the sphere of technical organization – when, for instance, he tr…"
"Leisure and free activity are not accessible to everybody, and they are conditions in no way connected with the machi…"
"Leisure is the prerequisite of every free thought, every free activity. And this is why only the few are capable of i…"
"The impression we gain as we observe technical processes of any sort is not at all one of abundance. The sight of abu…"
"And the rational mind which stands behind the machine and keeps watch over its automatic, mechanical motion–it too is…"
"Technology can be expected to solve all problems which can be mastered by technical means, but we must expect nothing…"
"In every healthy economy the substance with which it works is preserved and used sparingly, so that consumption and d…"
"Why is it that the very thought of organizing pedestrians (really not a far-fetched thought), is somehow ludicrous? B…"
"What is euphemistically called production is really consumption. The gigantic technical apparatus, that masterpiece o…"
"From prophecies and visions we expect infallibility; that they come true with absolute certainty. But of a utopian ta…"