The peculiarity of our era is generalization and similarity of
desires and dreams. The mass culture is the shape of the culture in our age.
Any kind of production or any kind of technology, as it is introduced to the
market, will change shape and undergo numerous changes from one side of the
world to the other. A notion has been prevalent that technology is basically
immoral, i.e., what is beyond values and the means which can be equally used
for either good or evil purposes. However, is technology really culturally
impartial? If one looks at technology as a machine and the principle of work
the response will be positive, but if one looks at the minute details of human
activities which take place in line with the use of technology the answer will
be negative. Technology appears as a part of life and not something separate
from it.
Arnold Pacey in his book entitled the Culture of Technology has considered three different aspects for technology:
Arnold Pacey in his book entitled the Culture of Technology has considered three different aspects for technology:
1. The organizational aspect, consisting of the activity of
designers, engineers, consumers and labour unions.
2. The technical aspect which is a limited concept of technology,
that is to say, knowledge, skill and know-how, tolls and machines.
3. The cultural aspect means goals, values and moral rules, belief
in progress, affecting the creativity of designers.
He believed that people use
technology in its wide-scale concept and sometimes with its limited meaning.
When technology is presented in a more limited way, the cultural values and the
organizational factors related to it assume for it the shape of an alien factor.
In this case technology is known in its complete technical aspects, but in its
broad concept it should be considered equal to practicality. In this way it is
not impartial and has direct and indirect impacts on values, traditions and the
environment.
Therefore, since we know that
cultural values are a determining factor in the choice and impact of technology
and the latter actually transforms cultural values, how can technology and
culture as independent systems be co-ordinated?
Technology is a means for change
in the environment in order to make it compatible with necessary and inevitable
human needs; and culture is also man’s compatibility with the environment
around him and the relation he establishes with it. A direct relation exists
between culture and technology and both of these affect the other in a
sequential manner. In advanced societies — which are the birth place of
technology, it is attempted that social and cultural organization be put in
line with technological development.
Ladriere by referring to the vast
place occupied by science and technology in the life of modern societies wrote:
"the problem that arises is how cultures can accommodate them without
going astray, how they can at one and the same time satisfy the requirement in regard
to roots and having ultimate aims, and giving science and technology the full
recognition due to them." We are faced with two questions: on the one hand
we must consider under what conditions science and technology can be integrated
into a culture without destroying its inner harmony, and on the other hand we
must examine what is meant by the unity of a culture in the circumstances of
the world today, epitomized as these are by science, technology and their
attendant economic and political phenomena.
In developing countries
especially in traditional societies the situation is considerably more
complicated, because technology will be made an alien entity which appears as
an independent system in the face of existing cultural systems.
As we know, culture determines
the way in which individuals identify and recognize one another within their
own social sphere of action and the traditional cultures and value systems on
them constitute the factor for social harmony, and give a special cultural
identity to the members of a community which, in itself, is one of the needs
for endogenous development. In the compulsory process of social evolution and
change which emanates from the introduction of values and models of external
behaviour inspired by the advent of foreign technologies the cultural system in
their entirety are attacked upon. Therefore, the main risk lies in the
endangering of cultural identity which is rooted in the tradition of nations
and in the issue of preservation of cultural pluralism for the entire human
community. For example, the development of communication technology, the
ability to record and transmit sounds and images over any distance, and the
easy reproduction of these on a large scale, have changed the face of
contemporary culture. Mr. Amadou-Mathar M. Bow, in his opening address at the
conference on cultural policies in Latin America and the Carribbean (Bogota
1978) clearly highlighted the interrelation between culture and communication.
He stated, "the mass media. . . are not culturally neutral." They
reflect the thinking, the idea, the values, in short the vision of the world of
those who use them when they serve as the channel for transmitting to given
region value systems or ways of life which are foreign to the people of that
region and cannot be prevented in the end from wiping out the specific values
of those people, thus becoming even if unintentionally, instruments of cultural
alienation. Other feature of technology is the structuration of social
consumption patterns and introduction of a consumer logic into the developing
countries.
Much has been said about the
impact of technology on the educational systems of the Third World and also on
the aesthetic values. We emphasized mainly on negative cultural aspects of
technology. But we live in a world which is reliant on technology where the
motivating power of national development constitutes that technology. Although
it is recognized that technical devices have been designed in response to the
determined cultural needs and their compatibility with the goals of another
culture requires great endeavour.
We know that Third World
countries are faced with two major crises in the selection of technology :
1. Importation of technology has not brought desirable results.
2. Countries have not succeeded in developing the technologies in
conformity with their needs and cultural values.
Main reason for these two crises
originates from the fact that promotion of technology in these countries was
not an endogenous activity but the vast and uncontrolled diffusion of technical
implements. Basically the Third World have three options in the face of modern
technologies:
1. Passive posture or total acceptance of technologies without
paying any attention to their own endogenous environment.
2. Tendency on relinquishment that is a total dismissal of any
type of technology, and
3. Selection of those technologies which have greater conformity
with the socio-cultural and economic conditions of those countries.
Selection of an appropriate
technology emanates from this same third option. Even though the goal of an
appropriate technology is to maximize, the opportunities (positive effects),
and to minimize their harms (negative effects). Generally speaking, it is not
the inherent nature of a technology but the proportion of the link which that
technology is to have with the environment where it is to be used, that becomes
meaningful.
In our country too, similar to
many Third World countries there exist certain problems which, on account of
historical background and continuation, have emerged in the form of a
tradition. For instance, we quote here some cases to show as to how our
country, by making proper and positive use of technology, has succeeded in
bringing about a fundamental change in the ways of the people’s thinking and
mentality:
1. Large-scale use of the media technology in order to generalize
literacy among the people, and to bring about a change in the educational
system.
2. Use of modern technology such as video cassettes to promote
family planning in rural areas.
3. Use of long-range television pictures for promoting health care
in villages.
4. Use of media and communication technologies for creating
understanding among different ethnic groups.
Special attention has also been
devoted to the significance of technology, selection of an appropriate
technology, and its transfer within the framework of an industrial model. In
this case, a section entitled land processing "has been set up at the
Planning and Budget Ministry with the following two major goals": Determination of the capacity
of various sectors in the country, and specification of an appropriate
industrial and economic model. Simultaneous with it general criteria have been
set for the contracts in connection with the transfer of technology. A
commission has been formed to enforce this legislation. Its main objectives
stipulate that the commission will make its best efforts to prevent the import
of alien and non-essential technologies in the country, and endeavour to
realize this task through the self-sufficiency cells. Much stress is being laid
on the role of research and enquiry as the main factor for the attainment of an
endogenous technology. Currently more than 60 institutions are engaged in
cultural, scientific, social and economic researches throughout the country.
Iran, in its capacity as a
pioneer of science in history, and a country which is going through a
transitional phase and had gone through eight major political events over the
past eight decades, views technology as a positive device in the service of
humanity and intellectual development.
Culturally speaking, technology
is neither evil nor disastrous, rather it is a means that, if used properly,
could bring up the welfare of human beings. By deploying the laser technology
we may help cure the eye of a child in a village. However, laser could be used
to guide a bomb. We can use satellites for education and intellectual and
cultural progress of human beings or we can use them as a means to spread the
destructive cultural and ideological patterns. Therefore, if we accept the idea
which says, "technology is a means in the service of a superior objective
that is the better recognition of nature and a more suitable utilization of
nature, and safeguarding the cultural identity as a factor for the solidarity
and a requisite for the survival of nation", we have to know that the best
technology is not the most modern technology.
Technique produces the need. And
Man’s thirst could not be satiated. Therefore our culture necessitates evasion
of extremes (to abstain from extravagance) in using the natural resources.
The appropriate deployment of
technology should be acquired so that we would not be afflicted with its
negative outcome.
By depending on the people’s
innate abilities and capacities we should acquire more share in creating and
spreading technology.
Safeguarding the cultural
authenticity and identity does not mean to go away from the current of
technology and/or return to the past and to experience what was already
experienced by others, rather it is to go away from the atmosphere of slogans,
to harmonize ourselves, and accept the realities of the present world.
Protection of cultural identity and reinforcing it are of vital importance.
Similarly, technology constitutes the reality of time. Our goal must be to
protect our cultural identity by using the gifts of technology and not
sacrifice the former for the sake of the latter or ignore the benefits of
technology.
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