Popular Culture
Charles A. Lindbergh and the America Dilemma
The Conflict of Technology and Human Values
Susan M. GrayPopular Press
Throughout his life, Lindbergh's value structure, interests, and activities shifted and moved, yielding a conflict between instinct and intellect. Both its presence in his life and his readjustment of values in accordance with it are representative of his time and culture. He moved, with the twentieth century itself, from a faith in technology to a disenchantment with it and finally to a balanced resolution that synthesized the seeming oppositions of technology and the human spirit. This emphasis on a balance between technology and humanity, and Lindbergh's belief that maintained the complementarity rather than the opposition of the two forces, finally culminated in a post-technological mysticism, a teleological worldview of science and nature as aspects of the same physical and spiritual environment.
For more information contact the UW Press at phone: 608-263-1110, email: uwiscpress@uwpress.wisc.edu
LC: 88-070505 TL
136 pp. 6 x 9
ISBN 0-87972-422-6 Cloth $19.95 t
(ISBN 0-87972-423-4 Paper i s out of print)
To order, you can accumulate titles in the Shopping Cart by clicking on the bulleted lines below. You can submit your order electronically, paying for it with MasterCard or Visa.
Click here for further explanation of shopping cart feature.Never ordered from us before?
Read this first.
Home | Books | Journals | Events | Textbooks | Authors | Related | Search | Order | Contact If you have trouble accessing any page in this web site, contact Kirt Murray, Web manager. E-mail: kdmurray@wisc.edu or by phone at 608-263-0733. © 2005, The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System