Caught Between Technophilia and Technophobia: Culture, Technology and the Law

  • Boehme-Neßler V
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Abstract

New technologies change the world and make people react. When a new technology emerges and starts to spread if you look at cultural history it is both welcomed as visionary and feared as a threat to culture. Is this justified? Does technology really shape culture and society? Or is it actually the other way around: does technological development depend on the culture, politics and economics of a society? This either/or controversy has now more or less been settled. There are close mutual influences between technological and cultural developments within society. It is only once a certain level of cultural development has been reached, that certain technological processes which lead to innovations are enabled. And vice versa: developments in technology influence the politics, economics and culture of a society. What does this recognition mean for the law? As an important part of culture, the law is involved in this mutual influencing simultaneously as both a subject and an object. It influences technological developments and at the same time is itself shaped by them.

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Boehme-Neßler, V. (2011). Caught Between Technophilia and Technophobia: Culture, Technology and the Law. In Pictorial Law (pp. 1–18). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-11889-0_1

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