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rapid growth of science,devevopments in many fields is a curse or a boon for our Indian people ,Indian culture???????

2007-08-30 02:12:47 · 5 answers · asked by Vishal 1 in Social Science Sociology

5 answers

I believe in growth of science for a better standard of living. First of all Medicine will bring more health and longer life. Then Engineering will give more popularity, and will help in water conducting technology, for more cleaness and order. Young people will be stimulated to study also in college and University, so I see a culture growth. Progress is not only a curse!

2007-08-30 07:30:36 · answer #1 · answered by Cristina 5 · 0 0

Can u imagine a life during stone age? People were living then & now also. Imagine if there would not have been electricity or if Thomal Alva Addison hadn't invented the bulb lighting in your house? Is that a curse or a boon? Inventions & discoveries in science are never a curse but the applications are. The mind & thinking ability given by God to human being is not a curse but when mind is polluted & if one thinks of killing or stealing or robbing somebody then it's a curse.

Beauty is not a curse but when beauty is exposed & shown with vulgarity it becomes a curse & every one knows all social culture has changed due to wrong application of beauty in today's world. Everything in this world is marketed & sold with the help of sex say beauty is exposed & vulgarity plays the main roll.

2007-09-01 08:04:16 · answer #2 · answered by Mel 2 · 0 0

Well, as an American--and a historian of technology (one of m y major fields of study) the answer is not either /or.

Progress in science and technology will bring long-term gains in living standards--and in both social and individual empowerment and freeedom and opportunity.

But the transition is difficult. Perhaps in theory it could be smooth--but no nation has yet managed to make that change from non-industrial to industrial smoothly. You will see periods of increased social and ecconomic inequality, changes in culture as people adapt to the new conditions, and soon.

Ultimately India will be a nation where the average person is better off. But getting there isn't a comfortable process--and not without cost.

2007-08-30 09:21:55 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The progress in science and technology, will bring long-term gains in living standards. In both social and individual empowerment and freeedom and opportunity.

In this case of transition, it is difficult. Perhaps in theory it could be smooth, but no nation has yet managed to make that change from, non-industrial to industrial smoothly. You will see periods of increased social and ecconomic inequality, changes in culture as people adapt to the new conditions, and soon.

Ultimately India will be a nation where the average person is better off. But getting there isn't a comfortable process--and not without cost.

2007-08-30 09:43:13 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

both

2007-08-30 12:24:07 · answer #5 · answered by Rana 7 · 0 0

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