Theology, Ethics, and Technology in the Work of Jacques Ellul and Paul Virilio is a ground-breaking engagement with the stark divergence in Christian assessments of technology after the Second World War. As North Americans revelled in the wealth unleashed by the industrial might that had ended the war, Christians in Europe who had seen its effects first hand found less to celebrate. In excavating the underappreciated tradition of thinking about technology in Ellul and Virilio, Michael Morelli recovers essential resources and insights for Christians desiring to critically engage the brutal efficiency of our technological present.
— Brian Brock, University of Aberdeen
Technology as a power and a practice is often presented as the modern idol par excellence. Judging it, condemning it is not enough; we still need to build a theology that meets the expectations and challenges of believers and humans of our time. Jacques Ellul and Paul Virilio carried out this task with audacity and intelligence. Michael Morelli, in studying their work, does more than give them the intellectual place they deserve: he provides the foundations for a form of theological thought made necessary today.
— Jacques Arnould, Centre national d’études spatiales, France
Ours is a technological age. Yet critical and reflective, even responsible, thinking about technology is not abundant. Working with and from the writings of Paul Virilio and Jacques Ellul, Michael Morelli offers an incisive and important contribution to such thinking. This is a book worth reading! This is a book that illuminates not only the critical philosophy of technology but also the sociological and theological studies germane to the tradition these thinkers inhabited for their examination and interrogation of our present age—like all other before it, an age in waiting for and still learning to bear witness to Christ.
— Ashley John Moyse, McDonald Postdoctoral Fellow in Christian Ethics and Public Life, University of Oxford
In the ongoing struggle to come to grips with what technology is doing with us and our societies there is much to be learned from the important work of Virilio and Ellul. Morelli’s fine study insightfully reads these two critics together to excellent effect, illuminating the decisive theological dimension of their work and tracing the contours of an emerging tradition of ethical analysis and critique from which much is to be hoped.
— Philip G. Ziegler, University of Aberdeen
I loved reading this account of two wise French critics of technology. One, a Protestant exposer of idols; the other, a Catholic expositor of the image, both capable of incandescent readings of scripture and razor-sharp insight about our times. Morelli’s work is enough to make you wonder what other surprising theological resources there might be to help unmask our modern idols and free us from the clutches of the little gods in our pockets and the propagandists colonizing our imaginations.
— Jason Byassee, former Butler Chair in Homiletics and Biblical Hermeneutics at the Vancouver School of Theology
One of our brightest young Jacques Ellul scholars, Michael Morelli, invites us into a philosophicallly deep, biblically critical, historically urgent consideration of how our contemporary world is dominated by not just our technological devices but a narrow technological way valuing, thinking, acting, and making. What makes Morelli's exploration unique is the way he brings into conversation not just Jacques Ellul but Paul Virilio. This volume stretches the mind and then pushes us toward radical, faithful, redemptive response.
— David W. Gill, Founder & President, International Jacques Ellul Society
In this important book, Michael Morelli brings Jacques Ellul and Paul Virilio in astute dialogue about technologies. As Morelli skillfully explores and connects their works, he also mediates on the promises and propaganda of the technologies Ellul and Virilio encountered. Morelli wonders, with them, "How are our contemporary technologies forming us to believe in their power and promise, even to the point of idolatry?" Morelli's insights suggest to Christians they need careful deliberation in technology use—especially since it is so easy to become blinded to their power and all-too-quickly to succumb to their charms without appropriate consideration for Christian formation. This book is well-worth reading for its scholarly inquiries into Ellul and Virilio as well as for its considered questions about the ways technologies function for us as individuals and as a church.
— Jana M. Bennett, University of Dayton
Jacques Ellul and Paul Virilio were two of the most important French intellectuals dealing with the often exploitative and alienating entailments of contemporary technology, media, and propaganda. In this thoughtful and groundbreaking work, Morelli draws out novel correlations between the two thinkers and affords readers the opportunity to acquaint themselves with the profoundly relevant and prophetic ideas and implications of Ellul and Virilio. A brilliant piece of scholarship.
— Jacob E. Van Vleet, Vice-President, International Jacques Ellul Society
The book is an interesting read for anyone interested in the intersection of technology, ethics, and theology. Ellul’s and Virilio’s works are notoriously complex readings, and Morelli does an outstanding job explaining their key insights and merging this into a relevant theology and ethics. Although the two scholars take different angles in approaching technology, their perspectives tend to be surprisingly complementary
— Journal of Reformed Theology