Edward Tenner

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Why Things Bite Back: Technology and the Revenge of Unintended Consequences

From Reviews and Comments


"Why Things Bite Back offers a much-needed healthy balance between contemporary technological utopian fantasies and neo-Luddite despair. This superb guide to our high-tech world deserves a wide readership." -- Howard Segal, Nature


"No one is safe from Mr. Tenner's analytical eye.... He has amassed a staggering amount of research in `Why Things Bite Back,' all of it clearly and succinctly presented. His truest remark is that no futurist `has ever lost business because of a wrong prediction.' --Dick Teresi, New York Times Book Review


"Depressed? Don't be. But do read the new book ... Edward Tenner's ``Why Things Bite Back: Technology and the Revenge of Unintended Consequences.'' Tenner .... is, on balance, cheerful, in his mordant manner, about ``the tendency of the world around us to get even, to twist our cleverness against us.'' -- George Will, Newsweek


"The historical rule of irony isn't a new concept. But it is the genius of Edward Tenner's Why Things Bite Back to provide us with new tools to analyze our predicament--tools we can use, perhaps, to occupy our time while trapped in a traffic jam in the car that was supposed to speed us on our way, or while idled by carpal tunnel syndrome caused by the machines that substitute information for physical labor, or while keeping vigil by the bedside of a chronically and painfully ill relative who would long since have been dead save for the miracles of medicine." --Philip Johnson, Amicus Journal


"Why Things Bite Back is a refreshing antidote to ... earnest risk-management orthodoxy. Edward Tenner has a keen nose for paradox and irony and a very different idea of common sense. Given the catalogue of errors that serves as his subject matter, he is remarkably cheerful--partly, I suspect, because he is one of nature's optimists and partly because like most of us he enjoys what happens when pomposity steps on a banana skin." -- John Adams, Scientific American



Selected Works

Books
Our Own Devices: The Past and Future of Body Technology
Humanity remaking itself through technology
Why Things Bite Back: Technology and the Revenge of Unintended Consequences
The self-cancelling, self-frustrating side of human ingenuity, and what to do about it.
Books/Essays
The French Connections
The U.S. military-industrial complex's surprising debt to France.
Magazine Articles
When Systems Fracture On the tendency of advanced technology to promote self-deception
A review of James R. Chiles, Inviting Disaster: Lessons from the Edge of Technology in Harvard Magazine
The Life of Chairs
How sitting customs have affected the human body
The Xanadu Effect
Are big structures harbingers of decline?
Lasting Impressions
Harvard's debt to the shoe industry
Environment for Genius
The Harvard Society of Fellows, a history and personal appreciation


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