Religion and Revolution (3)

Full acceptance of the everyday overfill of days would require (from re-, plus quaerere, “to ask, to seek)”, not a one-time, once-and-for-all revolution, but a permanent, ever-ongoing one, as it were, an everyday ever again new revolution to match the everyday ever again newness of every new day.

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The Conversion of Nature and Technology (4)

Under the technological attitude the whole of nature (including man, insofar as he is conceived to belong to nature) for the first time becomes manifest as a field open to human organization and control. Nature appears as in principle subject to mastery, and science and technology become the means of establishing man's dominion over nature—the goal already clearly envisioned by Descartes. Knowledge becomes the means for achieving mastery; knowledge, that is, becomes technological. Nature, in turn, is to be known in order to be controlled.

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The Conversion of Nature and Technology (3)

Although, under the theoretical attitude, the dimension of the sustaining, overwhelming and ineluctable has been dislocated from nature to the metaphysical, still, societal institutions serve to establish a relationship between man and that dimension. The way to that which inescapably sustains and yet overwhelms man is not yet blocked. However, with the emergence of a new transformation of basic attitude (and, hence, of the life-world itself), a transformation beginning with the Renaissance and the birth of modern science, and which might be called the transformation to the “technological attitude,” a more nearly irreparable dislocation occurs of that dimension which nature once was.

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