Future Technoscientific Education: Atheism and Ethics in a Globalizing World

Bulletin of Science Technology Society, Vol. 31, No. 2, pp. 81-102, April 2011

Posted: 14 Jul 2011

See all articles by Colin D. Pearce

Colin D. Pearce

Clemson University - College of Business and Behavioral Science

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Date Written: July 14, 2011

Abstract

This article attempts to assess the claim that the unum necessarium in our time is the general dissemination of scientific knowledge because liberal civilization or the “good society” cannot be had in the presence of traditional religion and “metaphysics.” The paper attempts to place this claim in the context of continuing globalization and related questions such as 9/11, Fundamentalist Islam, Sino-Western relations, “pop” atheism and the prospect of a “post-human” future. The paper describes the continuance of pre-Enlightenment traditions and beliefs even as constant globalizing influences with their attendant secularism, atheism and technologism make their presence felt. The paper canvasses the views of Chet Raymo, C.S. Lewis, Bryan Appleyard, Werner Heisenberg, Stanley Rosen, Henry Adams, Friedrich Nietzsche Martin Heidegger and Francis Fukuyama as a means of assessing the claim that an education rooted in a simple commitment to scientific progressivism will be inadequate to the demands of the 21st Century.

Keywords: globalization, education, enlightenment, atheism, fideism, technology, metaphysics, progress, liberalism, positivism

Suggested Citation

Pearce, Colin D., Future Technoscientific Education: Atheism and Ethics in a Globalizing World (July 14, 2011). Bulletin of Science Technology Society, Vol. 31, No. 2, pp. 81-102, April 2011, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1885571

Colin D. Pearce (Contact Author)

Clemson University - College of Business and Behavioral Science ( email )

Clemson, SC 29631
United States

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