1993 Fiscal Year Final Research Report Summary
Project/Area Number |
04301001
|
Research Category |
Grant-in-Aid for Co-operative Research (A)
|
Allocation Type | Single-year Grants |
Research Field |
Philosophy
|
Research Institution | Tohoku University |
Principal Investigator |
IWATA Yasuo Tohoku Univ., Arts & Letters, Professor, 文学部, 教授 (30000574)
|
Co-Investigator(Kenkyū-buntansha) |
KASHIWABARA Keiichi Tohoku Univ., Arts & Letters, Professor, 文学部, 教授 (30008635)
HOSOI Yusuke Seishin Univ., Arts & Letters, Professor, 文学部, 教授 (20054562)
SAKAGUCHI Fumi Tohoku Univ., International Culture, Professor, 国際文化研究科, 教授 (40012489)
KOZUMA Tadashi Tohoku Univ., Arts & Letters, Professor, 文学部, 教授 (10054298)
KUMADA Yoichiro Chuo Univ., Arts & Letters, Professor, 文学部, 教授 (80102888)
|
Project Period (FY) |
1992 – 1993
|
Keywords | Technology / Art / Science / Nature |
Research Abstract |
In our contemporary world, technology seems to have a violent power over which human being is no more able to have a control, and from which human being is threatend with self-destruction. We have no more optimistic view of the 19th century people who believed in the realization of hapiness by the endless progress of technology. In this situation, it is inevitable for technology to be controled by ethical principle. But our research tried to have an another approach to this problem. We looked to the marvelous fact that originally technology and arts were the same thing and were called equally 'poiesis' in the Greek world. This idea continues to prevail through the tradition of artes liberales of medieval age untill renaissance. From this time on, the union of these two main human activities were split, and on the one hand, thechnology tended to become more and more the instrument of human dominion over nature which was an expression of human arrogance as well as of human self-destruction, and on the other hand, arts became asympathetic and assimilating attitude with nature where human being sought to find his final rest and consolation. Our research traced in various ways this development of 'poiesis'. But our result is that, while art can surely afford one of the final consolation to us, it cannot give an indication to technology how it ought to behave. This important role should be entrusted to ethics.
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