|
Ursula Martius Franklin, (born September 16, 1921), is a Canadian metallurgist, research physicist, author and educator who has taught at the University of Toronto for more than 40 years.〔Lumley, Elizabeth (editor) (2008), ''Canadian Who's Who 2008''. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, p.439.〕 She is the author of ''The Real World of Technology'', which is based on her 1989 Massey Lectures, ''The Ursula Franklin Reader: Pacifism as a Map'', a collection of her papers, interviews, and talks and, ''Ursula Franklin Speaks: Thoughts and Afterthoughts'', containing 22 of her speeches and five interviews between 1986 and 2012. Franklin is a practising Quaker and has been active in working on behalf of pacifist and feminist causes. She has written and spoken extensively about the futility of war and the connection between peace and social justice.〔Franklin (Reader), pp.2–5.〕 Franklin has received numerous honours and awards, including the Governor General's Award in Commemoration of the Persons Case for promoting the equality of girls and women in Canada and the Pearson Medal of Peace for her work in advancing human rights. In 2012, she was inducted into the Canadian Science and Engineering Hall of Fame.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=U of T Engineers Inducted into Canadian Science and Engineering Hall of Fame )〕 A Toronto high school, Ursula Franklin Academy, has been named in her honour.〔Lumley, p.439.〕 Franklin is best known for her writings on the political and social effects of technology. For her, technology is much more than machines, gadgets or electronic transmitters. It is a comprehensive ''system'' that includes methods, procedures, organization, "and most of all, a mindset".〔Franklin (Real World), p.12.〕 She distinguishes between ''holistic'' technologies used by craft workers or artisans and ''prescriptive'' ones associated with a division of labour in large-scale production. Holistic technologies allow artisans to control their own work from start to finish. Prescriptive technologies organize work as a sequence of steps requiring supervision by bosses or managers.〔Franklin (Real World), pp.18–20.〕 Franklin argues that the dominance of prescriptive technologies in modern society discourages critical thinking and promotes "a culture of compliance".〔Franklin (Real World), p.24.〕 For some, Franklin belongs in the intellectual tradition of Harold Innis and Jacques Ellul who warn about technology's tendency to suppress freedom and endanger civilization.〔Rose, Ellen. "An Interview with Heather Menzies (2003)." ''Antigonish Review''. January 1, 2004, p.113.〕 Franklin herself acknowledges her debt to Ellul as well as to several other thinkers including Lewis Mumford, C.B. Macpherson, E. F. Schumacher and Vandana Shiva.〔see Franklin (Reader) p.210, for example, as well as the more comprehensive list on pp.367–368.〕 == Early life and career == Ursula Franklin was born in Munich, Germany on September 16, 1921.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Ursula Franklin )〕〔〔 Her mother was Jewish and her father came from an old German family. Because of the Nazi persecution of the Jews, her parents tried to send their only child to school in Britain when World War II broke out, but the British refused to issue a student visa to anyone under 18. Her parents were interned in concentration camps while Franklin herself was sent to a forced labour camp. Miraculously, the family survived The Holocaust and was reunited in Berlin after the war.〔Franklin, Ursula. (2014) ''Ursula Franklin Speaks: Thoughts and Afterthoughts''. Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press.〕 Franklin says she decided to study science because she went to school during a time when the teaching of history was censored. "I remember a real subversive pleasure," she told an interviewer many years later, "that there was no word of authority that could change either the laws of physics or the conduct of mathematics."〔 In 1948, Franklin received her Ph.D. in experimental physics at the Technical University of Berlin.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Hagey Lecturer addresses technology )〕 She began to look for opportunities to leave Germany after realizing there was no place there for someone fundamentally opposed to militarism and oppression. Franklin moved to Canada after being offered a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Toronto (U of T). She then worked for 15 years (from 1952 to 1967) as a senior scientist at the Ontario Research Foundation.〔 In 1967, Franklin became the first female professor in the U of T's Faculty of Engineering where she was an expert in metallurgy and materials science.〔 Franklin was a pioneer in the field of archaeometry, which applies modern materials analysis to archaeology. She worked for example, on the dating of prehistoric bronze, copper and ceramic artifacts.〔Sheinin, p.839.〕 In the early 1960s, Franklin investigated levels of strontium-90—a radioactive isotope in fallout from nuclear weapons testing—in children's teeth.〔 Her research contributed to the cessation of atmospheric weapons testing.〔 Franklin has published more than a hundred scientific papers and contributions to books on the structure and properties of metals and alloys as well as on the history and social effects of technology.〔Franklin (Reader), p.369.〕 As a member of the Science Council of Canada during the 1970s, Franklin chaired an influential study on conserving resources and protecting nature. The study's 1977 report, ''Canada as a Conserver Society'', recommended a wide range of steps aimed at reducing wasteful consumption and the environmental degradation that goes with it.〔Science Council of Canada. (1977) ''Canada as a Conserver Society: Resource Uncertainties and the Need for New Technologies''. Ottawa: Supply and Services Canada, pp.71–88.〕 The work on that study helped shape Franklin's ideas about the complexities of modern technological society.〔Franklin (Reader), pp.137–138.〕 Franklin was also active in the Voice of Women (VOW), now the Canadian Voice of Women for Peace, one of Canada's leading social advocacy organizations. In 1968, she and VOW national president Muriel Duckworth presented a brief to a House of Commons committee asserting that Canada and the United States had entered into military trade agreements without adequate public debate. They argued that these commercial arrangements made it difficult for Canada to adopt independent foreign policy positions such as calling for an immediate U.S. military withdrawal from South Vietnam.〔Kerans, Marion Douglas. (1996) ''Muriel Duckworth: A Very Active Pacifist''. Halifax: Fernwood Publishing, p.135.〕 In 1969, Franklin and Duckworth called on a committee of the Canadian Senate to recommend that Canada discontinue its chemical and biological weapons research and spend money instead on environmental research and preventive medicine.〔Kerans, p.117.〕 Franklin was also part of a 1969 VOW delegation that urged the federal government to withdraw from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and establish a special agency to oversee Canadian disarmament.〔Kerans, p.138.〕 In the 1980s, Franklin participated in an organized campaign to win the right for conscientious objectors to redirect part of their income taxes from military uses to peaceful purposes. Her 1987 paper, written to support the campaign, argued that the well-recognized right to refuse military service on grounds of conscience should be extended to include the right to refuse to pay taxes for war preparations.〔The paper appears in ''The Ursula Franklin Reader'', as "The Nature of Conscience and the Nature of War," pp.46–60.〕 Franklin asserted that the freedom of conscience provision of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guaranteed this form of conscientious objection.〔Section 2 of the Charter states that everyone has certain fundamental freedoms including (a) freedom of conscience and religion.〕 Her paper was to be part of an appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada. The lower courts had convicted those withholding part of their taxes of violating the Income Tax Act. In 1990 however, the Supreme Court declined to hear the appeal.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=A Brief History of Conscientious Objection in Canada )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Conscientious Objection to Military Taxes )〕 Following Franklin's retirement, she and several other retired female faculty members filed a class action lawsuit against the University of Toronto claiming it had been unjustly enriched by paying women faculty less than comparably qualified men. In 2002, the lawsuit was settled when the university acknowledged that many of its female professors had suffered from gender barriers and pay discrimination during their careers. As a result, about 60 retired women faculty received a pay equity settlement intended to compensate them for the lower salaries and pensions they had received.〔Valpy, Michael. "U of T recognizes female academics faced barriers." ''Globe and Mail'', April 20, 2002.〕 Franklin continues to have a strong association with the University of Toronto's Massey College as a continuing senior fellow and senior resident.〔 Her many activities include encouraging young women to pursue careers in science, promoting peace and social justice, and speaking and writing about the social effects of science and technology.〔Swenarchuk, pp.5,6,9,12,16,29,34.〕 Many of her articles and speeches on pacifism, feminism, technology and teaching are collected in ''The Ursula Franklin Reader'' published in 2006. Franklin is also the author of ''The Real World of Technology'' which is based on her 1989 Massey Lectures broadcast on CBC Radio. In April 2013, Franklin donated her extensive collection of writings devoted to Chinese culture and history to the Confucius Institute at Seneca College in Toronto. The collection included more than 220 texts, books, publications, and journals interpreting Chinese culture and history from the perspective of Western scholars. It also contained some of Franklin's own working papers and files.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Gift from Dr. Ursula Franklin will benefit Seneca students, faculty, and community for generations to come )〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Ursula Martius Franklin, (born September 16, 1921), is a Canadian metallurgist, research physicist, author and educator who has taught at the University of Toronto for more than 40 years.Lumley, Elizabeth (editor) (2008), ''Canadian Who's Who 2008''. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, p.439. She is the author of ''The Real World of Technology'', which is based on her 1989 Massey Lectures, ''The Ursula Franklin Reader: Pacifism as a Map'', a collection of her papers, interviews, and talks and, ''Ursula Franklin Speaks: Thoughts and Afterthoughts'', containing 22 of her speeches and five interviews between 1986 and 2012. Franklin is a practising Quaker and has been active in working on behalf of pacifist and feminist causes. She has written and spoken extensively about the futility of war and the connection between peace and social justice.Franklin (Reader), pp.2–5. Franklin has received numerous honours and awards, including the Governor General's Award in Commemoration of the Persons Case for promoting the equality of girls and women in Canada and the Pearson Medal of Peace for her work in advancing human rights. In 2012, she was inducted into the Canadian Science and Engineering Hall of Fame.(【引用サイトリンク】title=U of T Engineers Inducted into Canadian Science and Engineering Hall of Fame ) A Toronto high school, Ursula Franklin Academy, has been named in her honour.Lumley, p.439. Franklin is best known for her writings on the political and social effects of technology. For her, technology is much more than machines, gadgets or electronic transmitters. It is a comprehensive ''system'' that includes methods, procedures, organization, "and most of all, a mindset".Franklin (Real World), p.12. She distinguishes between ''holistic'' technologies used by craft workers or artisans and ''prescriptive'' ones associated with a division of labour in large-scale production. Holistic technologies allow artisans to control their own work from start to finish. Prescriptive technologies organize work as a sequence of steps requiring supervision by bosses or managers.Franklin (Real World), pp.18–20. Franklin argues that the dominance of prescriptive technologies in modern society discourages critical thinking and promotes "a culture of compliance".Franklin (Real World), p.24.For some, Franklin belongs in the intellectual tradition of Harold Innis and Jacques Ellul who warn about technology's tendency to suppress freedom and endanger civilization.Rose, Ellen. "An Interview with Heather Menzies (2003)." ''Antigonish Review''. January 1, 2004, p.113. Franklin herself acknowledges her debt to Ellul as well as to several other thinkers including Lewis Mumford, C.B. Macpherson, E. F. Schumacher and Vandana Shiva.see Franklin (Reader) p.210, for example, as well as the more comprehensive list on pp.367–368.== Early life and career ==Ursula Franklin was born in Munich, Germany on September 16, 1921.(【引用サイトリンク】title=Ursula Franklin ) Her mother was Jewish and her father came from an old German family. Because of the Nazi persecution of the Jews, her parents tried to send their only child to school in Britain when World War II broke out, but the British refused to issue a student visa to anyone under 18. Her parents were interned in concentration camps while Franklin herself was sent to a forced labour camp. Miraculously, the family survived The Holocaust and was reunited in Berlin after the war.Franklin, Ursula. (2014) ''Ursula Franklin Speaks: Thoughts and Afterthoughts''. Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press.Franklin says she decided to study science because she went to school during a time when the teaching of history was censored. "I remember a real subversive pleasure," she told an interviewer many years later, "that there was no word of authority that could change either the laws of physics or the conduct of mathematics." In 1948, Franklin received her Ph.D. in experimental physics at the Technical University of Berlin.(【引用サイトリンク】title=Hagey Lecturer addresses technology ) She began to look for opportunities to leave Germany after realizing there was no place there for someone fundamentally opposed to militarism and oppression. Franklin moved to Canada after being offered a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Toronto (U of T). She then worked for 15 years (from 1952 to 1967) as a senior scientist at the Ontario Research Foundation. In 1967, Franklin became the first female professor in the U of T's Faculty of Engineering where she was an expert in metallurgy and materials science.Franklin was a pioneer in the field of archaeometry, which applies modern materials analysis to archaeology. She worked for example, on the dating of prehistoric bronze, copper and ceramic artifacts.Sheinin, p.839. In the early 1960s, Franklin investigated levels of strontium-90—a radioactive isotope in fallout from nuclear weapons testing—in children's teeth. Her research contributed to the cessation of atmospheric weapons testing. Franklin has published more than a hundred scientific papers and contributions to books on the structure and properties of metals and alloys as well as on the history and social effects of technology.Franklin (Reader), p.369.As a member of the Science Council of Canada during the 1970s, Franklin chaired an influential study on conserving resources and protecting nature. The study's 1977 report, ''Canada as a Conserver Society'', recommended a wide range of steps aimed at reducing wasteful consumption and the environmental degradation that goes with it.Science Council of Canada. (1977) ''Canada as a Conserver Society: Resource Uncertainties and the Need for New Technologies''. Ottawa: Supply and Services Canada, pp.71–88. The work on that study helped shape Franklin's ideas about the complexities of modern technological society.Franklin (Reader), pp.137–138.Franklin was also active in the Voice of Women (VOW), now the Canadian Voice of Women for Peace, one of Canada's leading social advocacy organizations. In 1968, she and VOW national president Muriel Duckworth presented a brief to a House of Commons committee asserting that Canada and the United States had entered into military trade agreements without adequate public debate. They argued that these commercial arrangements made it difficult for Canada to adopt independent foreign policy positions such as calling for an immediate U.S. military withdrawal from South Vietnam.Kerans, Marion Douglas. (1996) ''Muriel Duckworth: A Very Active Pacifist''. Halifax: Fernwood Publishing, p.135. In 1969, Franklin and Duckworth called on a committee of the Canadian Senate to recommend that Canada discontinue its chemical and biological weapons research and spend money instead on environmental research and preventive medicine.Kerans, p.117. Franklin was also part of a 1969 VOW delegation that urged the federal government to withdraw from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and establish a special agency to oversee Canadian disarmament.Kerans, p.138.In the 1980s, Franklin participated in an organized campaign to win the right for conscientious objectors to redirect part of their income taxes from military uses to peaceful purposes. Her 1987 paper, written to support the campaign, argued that the well-recognized right to refuse military service on grounds of conscience should be extended to include the right to refuse to pay taxes for war preparations.The paper appears in ''The Ursula Franklin Reader'', as "The Nature of Conscience and the Nature of War," pp.46–60. Franklin asserted that the freedom of conscience provision of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guaranteed this form of conscientious objection.Section 2 of the Charter states that everyone has certain fundamental freedoms including (a) freedom of conscience and religion. Her paper was to be part of an appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada. The lower courts had convicted those withholding part of their taxes of violating the Income Tax Act. In 1990 however, the Supreme Court declined to hear the appeal.(【引用サイトリンク】title=A Brief History of Conscientious Objection in Canada )(【引用サイトリンク】title=Conscientious Objection to Military Taxes )Following Franklin's retirement, she and several other retired female faculty members filed a class action lawsuit against the University of Toronto claiming it had been unjustly enriched by paying women faculty less than comparably qualified men. In 2002, the lawsuit was settled when the university acknowledged that many of its female professors had suffered from gender barriers and pay discrimination during their careers. As a result, about 60 retired women faculty received a pay equity settlement intended to compensate them for the lower salaries and pensions they had received.Valpy, Michael. "U of T recognizes female academics faced barriers." ''Globe and Mail'', April 20, 2002. Franklin continues to have a strong association with the University of Toronto's Massey College as a continuing senior fellow and senior resident. Her many activities include encouraging young women to pursue careers in science, promoting peace and social justice, and speaking and writing about the social effects of science and technology.Swenarchuk, pp.5,6,9,12,16,29,34. Many of her articles and speeches on pacifism, feminism, technology and teaching are collected in ''The Ursula Franklin Reader'' published in 2006. Franklin is also the author of ''The Real World of Technology'' which is based on her 1989 Massey Lectures broadcast on CBC Radio.In April 2013, Franklin donated her extensive collection of writings devoted to Chinese culture and history to the Confucius Institute at Seneca College in Toronto. The collection included more than 220 texts, books, publications, and journals interpreting Chinese culture and history from the perspective of Western scholars. It also contained some of Franklin's own working papers and files.(【引用サイトリンク】title=Gift from Dr. Ursula Franklin will benefit Seneca students, faculty, and community for generations to come )」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|