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One of the themes of the book is that the technique of use is an essential complement to the technology involved. Baby bottles, for instance, involve a technique that must be successfully learned by mother and infant. They also allow fathers a nurturing role denied by nature. Tenner does not get into polemics about the bottle versus nursing controversy (nor does he do so for any of the controversial technologies he explores). We are physically affected by our technologies. There are millions of people who live literally on the Earth, doing without shoes; of course we evolved to get around without shoes originally. There is a movement to promote barefoot hiking, but there is always a self-fulfilling problem to overcome: shoes cause our feet to be so sensitive and vulnerable that we need shoes to protect them. In Japan, many grow up wearing _geta_ (two-piece clogs), which means that their gaits are measurably different from those who wear, say, ordinary sandals, and may be the reason Japan has very few world-class runners. It was in 1853 that an inventor set up a chair with movable parts and a system of springs that would allow rocking, although the chair rested on a pedestal supported by casters. The chair was no longer static; "This was the beginning of a new technique of sitting." Extensive studies have been done in the water to show exactly what position a body in complete rest takes (although previous evaluation of sleeping positions gave the same information), with chairs engineered to ensure that position. Piano innards have changed because of insistence of composers, especially Beethoven, on more complicated and louder performances, but although there have been improvements in the keyboard itself, no superstar has promoted them and none caught on.
The examples come thick and fast throughout the book's chapters. The technologies of writing and printing and the technique of reading have actually increased myopia in literate societies, though the explanations of the physiology behind the change are not yet satisfactory. Eyeglasses that correct the myopia may cause children's eyes to grow differently, increasing the myopia. The hard helmet of football changed the way the game is played; coaches used to instruct players to wrap their arms around the ball carrier to bring him down, but the helmet made them into human battering rams. The fans' appetite for aggressive and violent plays increased. People who sit in chairs that have a backrest suffer from weakening of the back muscles so that they more acutely need a backrest: "The chair is a machine for producing dependency on itself." Again and again, Tenner's surprising examples show that technology is often quite wonderful, and of course indispensable, but we only understand what it does to us after close examination of its effects, and the effects themselves often could never have been anticipated.
Tenner's exhaustively researched histories of the evolution of the baby bottle and baby formulas, eyeglasses, footwear, chairs, helmets and keyboards (of the musical and typewriter varieties) describe technologies that have affected the human body as much as, if not more than, they affected civilization. Tenner's focus on these body technologies is a welcome and appealing shift from the persistent focus on today's cutting-edge electronic technology.
There is no question that advances in computer technology over the last dozen years in particular have had a profound effect on society, culture, and business. But with the notable exception of certain medical advances, technology at that level is only just beginning to affect the human body at the same level as the devices Tenner describes. Within the context of human evolution, the technologies illustrated in OUR OWN DEVICES, though taken for granted for decades (or longer), are no less revolutionary than the body enhancements described in William Gibson's NEUROMANCER and other cyberpunk novels.
While eyeglasses may not seem as sexy or as exciting as the implants and body enhancements one finds in cyberpunk, they make it possible for me, a profoundly nearsighted, trifocal-wearing reader, to function in the world, let alone read anything I want, whether it's cyberpunk speculation of the future or a detailed history of the eyeglasses that today similarly empower millions. As a card-carrying techno-geek, I love new gadgets, but as body enhancements go, I can't think of anything more necessary and therefore more interesting than my glasses. Edward Tenner's highly informative book is important because he puts that issue into very sharp focus.
While life without electricity is as attractive a proposition as a do-it-yourself root canal, life without the familiar technologies described in OUR OWN DEVICES would truly reduce mankind to a state uncomfortably close to that of our knuckle-dragging ancestors. Chance --- and the apparent inadequacies of our electrical infrastructure --- has made Tenner's book a timely and significant one. Read it now, while the lights are still on.
--- Reviewed by Bob Rhubart
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