贝壳电子书 > 广告媒体电子书 > minerva’s owl >

第1章

minerva’s owl-第1章

小说: minerva’s owl 字数: 每页4000字

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!




“Minerva’s owl begins its flight only in the gathering dusk”。 Hegel worte in reference to the crystallization of culture achieved in major calssical writings in the period that saw the decline and fall of Grecian civilization。 The richness of that culture; its uniqueness; and its influence on the history of the West suggest that the flight began not only for the dusk of Grecian civilization but also for the civilization of the West。

I have attempted to suggest that Western civilization has been profoundly influenced by munication and that marked changes in munications have had important implications。 Briefly this address is divided into the following periods in relation to media of municaiton: clay; the stylus; and cuneiform script from the beginnings of civilization in Mesopotamia; papyrus; the brush; and hieroglyphics and hieratic to the Graeco…Roman period; and the reed pen and the alphabet to the retreat of the Empire from the West; parchment and the pen to the tenth century or the dark ages: and overlapping with paper; the latter being more important with the invention of printing; paper and the brush in China; and paper and the pen in Europe before the invention of printing or the Renaissance; paper and the printing press under handicraft methods to the beginning of the nineteenth century; or from the Reformation to the printing press since the beginning of the nineteenth century to paper manufactured from wood in the second half of the century; celluloid in the growth of the cinema; and finally the radio in the second quarter of the present century。 In each period I have attempted to trace the implications of the media of munication ofr the character of knowledge and to suggest that a monopoly or an oligopoly of knowledge is built up to the point that equilibrium is disturbed。

An oral tradition implies freshness and elasticity but students of anthropology have pointed to the binding character of custom in primitive cultures。 A plex system of writing bees the possession of a special class and tends to support aristocracies。 A simple flexible system of writing admits of adaptation to the vernacular but slowness of adaptation facilitates monopolies of knowledge and hierarchies。 Reading in contrast with writing implies a passive recognition of the power of writing。 Inventions in municaiton pel realignments in the monopoly or the oligopoly of knowledge。 A monopoly of knowledge incidental to specialized skill in writing which weakens contact with the vernacular will eventually be broken down by force。 In the words of Hume:” As force is always on the side of the governed; the governors have nothing to support them but opinion。 It is; therefore; on opinion that government is founded; and this maxim extends to the most despotic and the most military governments as well as to the most free and most popular。”

The relation of monopolies of knowledge to organized force is evident in the political and military histories of civilization。 An interest in learning assumes a stable society in which organized force is sufficiently powerful to provide sustained protection。 Concentration on learning implies a written tradition and introduces monopolistic elements in culture which are followed by rigidities and involve lack of contact with the oral tradition and the vernacular。 “Perhaps in a very real sense; a great institution is the tomb of the founder。” “Most organizations appear as bodies founded for the painless extinction fo ideas of the founder。” “To the founder of a school; everything may be forgiven; except his school。” This change is acpanied by a weakening of the relations between organized force and the vernacular and collapse in the face of technological change which has taken place in marginal regions which have escaped the influence of a monopoly of knowledge。 On the capture of Athens by the Goths in 267 A。D。 they are reported to have said; “Let us leave the Greeks these books for they make them so effeminate and unwarlike。”

With a weakening of protection of organized force; scholars put forth greater efforts and in a sense the flowering of the culture es before its collapse。 Minerva’s owl begins its flight in the gathering dusk not only from classical Greece but in turn from Alexandria; from Rome; form Constantinople; from the republican cities of Italy; from France; from Holland; and from Germany。 It has been said of the Byzantine Empire that “on the eve of her definite ruin; all Hellas was reassembling her intellectual energy to throw a last splendid glow”。 … “The perishing Empire of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries; especially the city of Constantinople; was a centre of ardent culture; both intellectual and artistic。” In the regions to which Minerva’s owl takes flight the success of organized force may permit a new enthusiasm and an owl takes flight the success of organized force may permit a new enthusiasm and an intense flowering of culture incidental to the migration of scholars engaged in Herculean efforts in a declining civilization to a new area with possibilities of protection。 The success of organized force is dependent on an effective bination of the oral tradition and the vernacular in public opinion with technology and science。 An organized public opinion following the success of force bees receptive to cultural importation。

……

I have attempted to show that sudden extensions of munication are reflected in cultural disturbances。 The use fo clay favoured a dominant role for the temples with an emphasis on priesthood and religion。 Libraries were built up in Babylon and Nineveh to strengthen the power of monarchy。 Papyrus favoured the development of political organization in Egypt。 Papyrus and a simplified form of writing in the alphabet supported the growth of democratic organization; literature; and philosophy in Greece。 Following Alexander empires returned with centres at Alexandria and elsewhere and libraries continued as sources of strength to monarchies。 Rome extended the political organizaton of Greece in its emphasis on law and eventually on empire。 Extablishement of a new capital at Constantinople was followed by imperial organization on the oriental model particularly after official recognition of Christianity。 Improvement of scripts and wider dissemination of knowledge enabled the Jews to survive by emphasis on the scriptures and the book。 In turn Christianity exploited the advantages of parchment and the codex in the Bible。 With access to paper the Mohammedans at Bagdad and later in Spain and Sicily provided a medium for the transmission of Greek science to the Western world。 Greek science and paper with encouragement of writing in the vernacular provided the wedge between the temporal and the spiritual power and destroyed the Holy Roman Empire。 The decline of Constantinople meant a stimulus to Greek literature and philosophy as the decline of Mohammedanism had meant a stimulus to science。

Printing brought renewed emphasis on the book and the rise of the Reformation。 In turn new methods of munication weakened the worship of the book and opened the way for new ideologies。 Monopolies or oligopolies of knowledge have been built up in relation to the demands of force chiefly on the defensive; but improved technology has strengthened the position of force on the offensive and pelled realignments faouring the vernacular。 Cultural disturbances are acpanied by periods in which force occupies an important place and are followed by perioks of quiescence in which law extablishes order。 The disturbances of the Macedonian and Roman were were followed by the growth of Roman law; the end of the barbarian invasions by the revival of Roman law; the end of the religious wars by the development of internationlal law’ under Grotius; and the end of the present wars of ideology by a search for a new basis of international law。

Perhaps we might end by a plea for consideration of th role of file oral tradition as a basis for a revival of effective vital discussion and in this for an appreciation on the part of universities of the fact that teachers and students are still living and human。 In the words of Justice Holmes; “To have doubted one’s own first principles is the mark of a 

返回目录 下一页 回到顶部 2 1

你可能喜欢的