Energy and American values
A multi-disciplinary team consisting of an engineer, a political scientist, an historian, and a professor of religion and physics view the question of energy and values from each other's perspective. The result is a synthesis of the team's views on all aspects of energy technology and how it affects human life in general as well as the lives of different classes and specific groups in our society. It begins with an historic overview of the way an abundance of energy has shaped America's use of it. It continues by considering the energy debate as a conflict between Jeffersonians who believe in decentralized, appropriate technology and the centralized, efficient technology of Hamiltonians. The authors wrestle with regional and geographical differences in energy resources, environmental impacts, and ethical problems. 384 references.
- OSTI ID:
- 5623361
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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Related Subjects
POLICY AND ECONOMY
ENERGY
VALUES
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
SOCIO-ECONOMIC FACTORS
TECHNOLOGY IMPACTS
USA
ETHICS
HUMAN FACTORS
PUBLIC POLICY
INSTITUTIONAL FACTORS
NORTH AMERICA
290200* - Energy Planning & Policy- Economics & Sociology
530100 - Environmental-Social Aspects of Energy Technologies- Social & Economic Studies- (-1989)