Scientific and Technological Progress, Political Beliefs and Environmental Sustainability

With the development of science and technology, a basically optimistic ideology of progress has emerged. This deterministic attitude has been challenged in recent decades as a result of harmful side-effects generated by the way technology and science have been approached and used. The study presente...

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Main Author: Makrakis Vassilios
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2012-01-01
Series:Discourse and Communication for Sustainable Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/v10230-012-0004-z
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spelling doaj-727554ece3ab4610bbbf29062909f4402021-09-05T21:25:14ZengSciendoDiscourse and Communication for Sustainable Education2255-75472012-01-0132012637410.2478/v10230-012-0004-zScientific and Technological Progress, Political Beliefs and Environmental SustainabilityMakrakis Vassilios0University of Crete, GreeceWith the development of science and technology, a basically optimistic ideology of progress has emerged. This deterministic attitude has been challenged in recent decades as a result of harmful side-effects generated by the way technology and science have been approached and used. The study presented here is a part of a larger international and comparative study dealing with global/environmental issues related to political orientation, science and technology. 3 080 pre-service teachers from Finland, Greece, Sweden, Japan and Holland answered a closed-end survey instrument. The results of this study show that none of the sample country respondents identified themselves as optimists concerning the impact of science and technology on society and environment. The no-stance and the pessimistic attitudes towards technology and science seem to derive from the human and environmental costs associated with science and technology development. A strong connection was found between environmental consciousness and attitudes towards the role and impact of science and technology on society. These results indicate that society and education, in particular, should place higher critical concerns about scientific and technological issues and their relation to the development of a sustainable society.https://doi.org/10.2478/v10230-012-0004-zsciencetechnologypolitical beliefsenvironmental sustainability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Makrakis Vassilios
spellingShingle Makrakis Vassilios
Scientific and Technological Progress, Political Beliefs and Environmental Sustainability
Discourse and Communication for Sustainable Education
science
technology
political beliefs
environmental sustainability
author_facet Makrakis Vassilios
author_sort Makrakis Vassilios
title Scientific and Technological Progress, Political Beliefs and Environmental Sustainability
title_short Scientific and Technological Progress, Political Beliefs and Environmental Sustainability
title_full Scientific and Technological Progress, Political Beliefs and Environmental Sustainability
title_fullStr Scientific and Technological Progress, Political Beliefs and Environmental Sustainability
title_full_unstemmed Scientific and Technological Progress, Political Beliefs and Environmental Sustainability
title_sort scientific and technological progress, political beliefs and environmental sustainability
publisher Sciendo
series Discourse and Communication for Sustainable Education
issn 2255-7547
publishDate 2012-01-01
description With the development of science and technology, a basically optimistic ideology of progress has emerged. This deterministic attitude has been challenged in recent decades as a result of harmful side-effects generated by the way technology and science have been approached and used. The study presented here is a part of a larger international and comparative study dealing with global/environmental issues related to political orientation, science and technology. 3 080 pre-service teachers from Finland, Greece, Sweden, Japan and Holland answered a closed-end survey instrument. The results of this study show that none of the sample country respondents identified themselves as optimists concerning the impact of science and technology on society and environment. The no-stance and the pessimistic attitudes towards technology and science seem to derive from the human and environmental costs associated with science and technology development. A strong connection was found between environmental consciousness and attitudes towards the role and impact of science and technology on society. These results indicate that society and education, in particular, should place higher critical concerns about scientific and technological issues and their relation to the development of a sustainable society.
topic science
technology
political beliefs
environmental sustainability
url https://doi.org/10.2478/v10230-012-0004-z
work_keys_str_mv AT makrakisvassilios scientificandtechnologicalprogresspoliticalbeliefsandenvironmentalsustainability
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