video games.
The Renaissance first taught man to realize the value of scientific
progress, but it was not until the 18th century that the Industrial
Revolution in the West really showed the impact science could have on
living through developments in land-tillage, commercial production,
transportation, and the beginning of the supply of mass-produced
consumer goods. Until about 1920, progress was steady but in the last 45
years, the process of applying of science to the needs of living has
accelerated enormously. This has been proportionate to the rate of
scientific discovery itself.
Today, there is available an enormous range of consumer goods from the
simple frying-pan to the jet plane, from the alarm-clock to the
computer. All these things serve to make life easier and more pleasant,
yet in themselves do not constitute civilization -- merely its
comfortable adjuncts. Progress in real living is achieved less through
’things’ than through education, the arts and the love of beauty.
Science has nothing to say to us in these categories, merely providing
aids and short-cuts. Without them, life would be no more than the
struggle for survival; there would be no time or incentive to pursue
higher things. 24274
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http://www.synthgames.com/index.html
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