How To Use technophilia In A Sentence
- Because he's caught technophilia, and it is at this point that the speech falls apart. Times, Sunday Times
- I advocate for an educational project that rejects both technophobia and technophilia.
- It's a stunningly inventive, inquisitive 26th century noir thriller, oil-slippery in technophilia and resplendent in ultra-violence, and vibrating with fascinating questions about power, longevity, authority, artificial intelligence... and it's also surprisingly touching with exquisite prose. Richard Morgan's Altered Carbon
- There is a militant sort of anti-militarism (which still celebrates the military), a certain blue-collar sensibility (perhaps derived from Cameron's truck-driving days), a consistent techno-skepticism (driven by technophilia), an environmental concern, and very strong female characters. William Bradley: The Common Threads of Avatar
- His technophilia shone through, but so did his rich sense of the absurd.
- The reason why I mention this is that it is an example of the impact of the growing pressure to technologize, speed up action, and quantify both the arts and education dealing with the arts, technophilia, if you will, applied to the arts. Neither Speed Nor Technology Improves Art « L.E. Modesitt, Jr. – The Official Website
- Yet social networking and all manner of technophilia will continue no matter the clear impact on human mental and physical health. Is Social Networking Killing You? - The Lede Blog - NYTimes.com
- In fact I'm more likely to think of it as a consequence of my minister father's technophilia that caused him to seek harmony between science and religion eg "archeology supports the old testament, science supports the Flood with a vapor canopy theory" and my mother's determination to be proud of us no matter what we became. My Short Class Autobiography, Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
- Broadly speaking, technophobia, misguided technophilia, and dysfunctional bodies and relationships emerged as thematic constants.
- At every major university in the country, one can still see enormous closed-circuit television sets looming over lecture halls, gathering dust, never used, relics of an earlier period of technophilia.