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FUTURE SHOCK
Our world is changing at rate faster than some people think
other people can adapt to. Between 1890 and 1920 technolgical
changes were having drastic effects on the daily lives of the middle
and upper classes and with some delay on the lives of the working
class too. Today and for the last 30 years, technological change
affecting people's daily lives has been much slower, and for about
the last five years, rapid social, political, and ideological change
has been the source of much stress. Part of this stress comes from
the mis-identification of its source as technological rather than
social. This causes the mistaken remedy to be proposed of slowing
technical change rather than adapting to the social changes. Most
likely, we shall re-enter a period of rapid technological change in
living patterns in another five to ten years. Note that the view
just expressed is contrary to that expressed in numerous recent
articles and the recent book "Future Shock" by Alvin Toffler.
In order to see the point, we must distinguish between the
pace of scientific and technological change itself and the rate of
change in the way people live. For example, atomic power plants
represent a technological change of great importance, but it makes no
difference to me when I press the light switch, whether the
electricity was produced by burning coal or by fissioning uranium.
Between 1890 and 1930, the following inventions came into
common use by great masses of people: electric lighting in the home,
central heating, telephones, automobiles, movies, and radio. These
inventions made the small middle class family without servants
feasible, allowed the middle class to move to the suburbs, gave each
person free physical access to the region of the country in which he
lives, and allowed immediate communication with one's relatives,
friends, girl friends, and business associates. The effect of these
innovations was very large. The style of relations between the sexes
was changed as the car expanded the scope of dating. Servants
disappeared from the families of the middle classes, the modern
nuclear family developed, reliance on the passive entertainment of
radio and movies became possible.
The recent effects of technological change have been much
smaller. Most of the innovations of greatest importance
scientifically have had little social effect. Mass air travel came
in the 1950's, but had much less social effect than mass rail travel
almost a century earlier.
Television came in the 1950's, and color television in the
1960's, but the social effect was only a strengthening of the earlier
introduction of radio.
The pill came in the 1960's but adequate contraceptive
devices already existed and were in widespread use by middle class
women who wanted sex without babies. Reliable female controlled
contraception came in the 1920's. The big step will be the morning
after pill that will obviate the need for planning.