And now for the sixth and final principle: Humane technology improves the human condition and helps people realize the dreams they have of themselves.


No matter what your government might be telling you, we probably don't need better defense technology. Instead of killer robots and city-leveling bombs, we need tech that adds to the very best in ourselves- our health, our minds and our dreams for the future. Naturalist E.O Wilson's notion of biophilia should not be limited just to humans. Technology should love life as much as we do.


Humane technology, as a concept, can be tricky to pin down. What is humane in one circumstance is irritating or destructive in another. A cell phone may be more humane than a landline, permitting the talker to wander around, free to conduct business or call home from the far side of the globe. But cell phones may be inhumane for precisely this reason.


A Blackberry or iPhone can seem less like an indispensable fifth limb than a second mouth that just won't shut up. A technology can never defined as entirely humane or entirely inhumane. There is no end point that makes a certain device 'humane.' We may not know it by how it looks, but we will know it by how it feels.


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  • In this case, I think it's the way technology is used which can be more human or less.

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