Quote by Alvin Toffler
Our technological powers increase, but the side effects and potent

Our technological powers increase, but the side effects and potential hazards also escalate. – Alvin Toffler

Other quotes by Alvin Toffler

Future shock is the shattering stress and disorientation that we induce in individuals by subjecting them to too much change in too short a time. – Alvin Toffler

Category:
Change
Read Quote

My wife and I, unlike many intellectuals, spent five years working on assembly lines. We came to fully understand the criticisms of the industrial age, in which you are an appendage of a machine that sets the pace. – Alvin Toffler

Category:
Age
Read Quote
Other Quotes from
Technology
category

Technology gives us the facilities that lessen the barriers of time and distance – the telegraph and cable, the telephone, radio, and the rest. – Emily Greene Balch

Category:
Technology

When CD technology first came out, it was just so much waste. – Rick Danko

Category:
Technology

What the public needs to understand is that these new technologies, especially in recombinant DNA technology, allow scientists to bypass biological boundaries altogether. – Jeremy Rifkin

Category:
Technology

I remember feeling that technology was like trying to draw with your foot. In a ski boot. It was the most indirect way to work imaginable, but the potential had us all excited. I started in stop motion. – Chris Wedge

Category:
Technology

Random Quotes

Ive always found it easier to be funny than to be serious. – Molly Ivins

Category:
funny

First, I do not think there is any silver bullet to solving the technology side of the security equation. – John W. Thompson

Category:
Technology

The learned are not agreed as to the time when the Gospel of John was written some dating it as early as the year 68, others as late as the year 98 but it is generally conceded to have been written after all the others. – Simon Greenleaf

Category:
dating

There is one quality more important than “know-how” and we cannot accuse the United States of any undue amount of it. This is “know-what” by which we determine not only how to accomplish our purposes, but what our purposes are to be. – Norbert Wiener, The Human Use of Human Beings, 1954

Category:
Goals