Edward Tenner

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From the 100th anniversary issue of Harvard Magazine, Nov.-Dec. 1998.

Environment for Genius

Edward Tenner was a Harvard Junior Fellow from 1969 to 1972. Years later, the ideas and values of the faculty directors of the program (Senior Fellows) and his peers continue to fascinate, inspire, and provoke him. Columbia, Michigan, and Princeton Universities have established their own versions of the program and even retained the circular name; a fellow (socius) is literally a member of a society.




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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