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Author: Neil Postman
Title: Technopoly: The Surrender of Culture to Technology
Air date: August 30, 1992
BRIAN LAMB: Neil Postman, author of "Technopoly: The Surrender of
Culture to Technology", what's your book all about?
NEIL POSTMAN: The tendency in American culture to turn over to
technology sovereignty, command, control over all of our social
institutions. In other words, the book is about how American has
developed a new religion, as it were, and the religion is its faith
in that human progress and technological innovation are the same
thing and that paradise can be achieved through greater and greater
commitment to technology.
LAMB: What is technology?
POSTMAN: I had to define it in the book rather broadly because not
only do I include machinery like television and computers and all of
that, but also techniques. I call them invisible technologies
because most people don't think of them as a sort of machinery --
things like statistics and polling and bureaucratic forms -- any
systematic and repeatable technique that tends to cause people to
constrain their thinking about the world.
LAMB: We talked a number of years ago about television. What impact
is technology having on television, and what's the impact on the
country?
POSTMAN: One of the reasons, Brian, that I felt I did this book is
that the last time we talked, as you suggest, it was about a book
that was almost wholly devoted to television. When I started to
think about that issue, I realized that you don't get an accurate
handle on what we Americans were all about by focusing on one
medium, that you had to see television as part of a kind of a system
of techniques and technologies that are giving the shape to our
culture. For instance, if one wants to think about what has happened
to public life in America, one has to think, of course, first about
television, but also about CDs and also about faxes and telephones
and all of the machinery that takes people out of public arenas and
keeps them fixed in their homes so that we have a kind of
privatization of American life.
One hears people say with some considerable enthusiasm that in the
future, putting television, computers and the telephone together,
people will be able to shop at home, vote at home, express political
preferences in many ways at home so that they never have to go out
in the street at all and never have to meet their fellow citizens in
any context because we'd have this ensemble of technologies that
keep us private, away from citizens. In fact, I think Ross Perot's
idea of a town meeting is a new kind of definition of town meeting
because it doesn't imply co-presence of people. He wants to do it
via electronic media, so that television as well as other
technologies redefine all sorts of things.
I mean, television has redefined -- as, I think, we talked about
last time -- what we mean by a public debate. We use to use the
Lincoln-Douglas debates as an example, as a kind of model or
metaphor of what we mean by political debate. These debates would go
on for hours. Television has redefined it, so now the two or
possibly three candidates stand in front of the television camera
and each one is given two minutes to respond to a very difficult
question, and the opponent is given 60 seconds to reply. Now, we
still call this a debate, but it's a redefinition of that term. Ross
Perot's suggestion that we use television as a form of a town
meeting is another redefinition of what we once meant by town
meeting. So one of the most interesting things about technology is
that it redefines our language. It gives us different meanings of
older words, and very often we're not quite as aware as we should be
of how that process is working.
LAMB: Good or bad?
POST: Well, in this book I mostly emphasize the bad part. I've done
that in most of my books. But I admit happily at the beginning of
the book that anyone who looks at technology as an either-or
development -- that is, either all good or all bad -- is making a
mistake. All technological change is what I call a Faustian bargain.
It gives you something, but it also taketh away something. Now, in
America -- and this is one of the reasons I thought I should write
this book -- we tend to be extremely enthusiastic about technology,
about what it is going to bring us, so that almost every American,
in considering anything from lasers to computers to television, can
tell you for a half hour or more what this new technology will do
for us. But there are very few people who have ever considered what
a new technology will undo. So I wrote my book from the point of
view of what it will undo; how it will change and has changed for
the worse some of our social institutions and psychic habits. But
this doesn't mean that I'm unaware of the positive possibilities of
some of the new technologies.
LAMB: You talk a lot about religion. What does the new technology do
to religion?
POSTMAN: I fear that our faith in technology has weakened a more
traditional sense of spirituality. Technology implies a kind of
rational -- or I should say, an emphasis on the rational because
technologies work. See, that's the wonderful thing about them.
Airplanes do fly and penicillin, I think, tends to make people
better and television does show you someone in some far-off place.
So technology works in an unambiguous way -- in the way that prayer,
for instance, or even faith in God doesn't always work. I don't
think all this began yesterday.
In fact, in the book I try to show how beginning really in the 17th
century, the faith that people had in a benign design, if you will,
has weakened and in our own century seems to have been replaced
almost in a religious sense by a faith in progress and progress
through technology: we will reach heaven if we can produce bigger
and better machinery and techniques. In fact, there are some people
who even believe we can solve the problem of death through
technology -- I think it's called cryogenics -- so that even that
ultimate problem that human beings have always had to deal with and
which our religious systems had always confronted. I mean, that was
one of the most significant parts of our religious system -- to help
us confront the idea of death.
In a technopoly, we say, well, you don't have to rely on faith.
Through science and technology, we'll be able to freeze you until at
some future date a solution is found for the disease that is killing
you now. So don't worry; just have faith. So, in summary, on your
question, I would say that faith and belief in technological
solutions has largely replaced what we now might think is an older,
more traditional notion of spirituality and faith in some
transcendent design.
LAMB: You made a point early in the book about how Martin Luther got
started -- with the ability to proselytize or to sell his point of
view through the printed word.
POSTMAN: Luther, of course, was absolutely prescient on the impact
of the printing press, although in a letter he wrote to the pope
after he had posted his thesis on the church door, he, I think,
feigned surprise that his message, his complaints against the church
had been translated into vernacular languages and spread so quickly
all over Europe through the printing press. He thought, as he said
in his letter, he had written these objections in academic language,
and he didn't think ordinary people would have access to it. But he
did know the power of the printing press. He understood it better
than almost anyone of this time and was not reluctant to credit the
printing press with the advancement of his ideas and of the
Reformation. So I like to write about Luther just from that point of
view because he understood, say, better than people like Copernicus
and later, of course, Galileo what the printing press would mean,
although Galileo -- I shouldn't underestimate him, because he was
also one who made use of the printing press.
He had one available to him for propaganda purposes -- in
particular, spreading the idea that he had invented the telescope,
which, in fact, he had not done. But the reason I brought up these
matters in the book about Luther and some of the others was to show
how new technologies transform everything about a culture. I mean,
there's a tendency of people to think that new technology is
additive, and I think new technologies are ecological. What I mean
is, that if you put the printing press into Europe in the mid 15th
century, you don't have 50 years later Europe plus the printing
press. You have a new Europe because everything gets changed -- the
political system, the religious system and so on.
If you put television into America in 1946, by 1960 you don't have
America just "plus television", but a new kind of America, so that
our social relations are altered and our attitudes toward childhood
are altered and our political system is altered and we get new
meanings of old words and so on. That's not something that's new in
culture. That's why I discussed Luther in the book -- that this
happens whenever you get new technologies. But the difference now is
that when Luther lived, the printing press was changing Europe. He
understood that. But then Western culture had about 300 years to
adapt itself to the printing press. So we developed new forms of
economic life, new political ideas, new notions about education --
all organized around the printing press. But in our own time, our
situation is much more difficult to cope with because almost daily,
it seems, new technologies come on the scene and our social
institutions don't have time to assimilate them and reorganize
themselves to accommodate the demands of the technology.
As soon as you start to do that, some new technology comes to make
that one obsolete, so everyone is in quite a state of confusion. The
reason I call America the first technopoly is that more than any
other culture that I can think of, we have committed ourselves to
technology. Our destiny now is tied up with technology. By the way,
the Germans and the Japanese and even the Koreans would dearly love
to become technopolies and are moving very rapidly in the direction
of American culture.
LAMB: We are taping this during the Democratic Convention. We're
surrounded by technology. But just as important, we're very close to
where you live. Where do you work and what do you do every day?
POSTMAN: I'm a professor at New York University and chair of a
department called the Department of Culture and Communication. One
of the things I do every day is receive faxes and send them. Just as
a little side note, Brian, at the moment I notice that most people
who send faxes still think of them as telegrams. Some people realize
that you can write a whole long letter with a fax, but one does get
faxes that say, "See you Thursday -- stop -- Hope you'll be there,"
and so on.
Faxes, I think, may help to restore the skill of letter writing in
years ahead. But mostly what we do in our academic way is to try to
study these processes that we've been talking about, to try to raise
the questions of what's to become of us if we lose a sense of
spirituality. If we devote all of our resources and our psychic
energies to making bigger and better machinery and designing better
techniques, will we become less human in some sort of traditional
way of defining that? I notice -- of course, people will be seeing
this after the Democratic Convention -- that many people are
surprised that candidate Clinton chose Albert Gore as a vice
president. People said, "Well, what about regional politics?"
because they're from the same region and I think their states are
contiguous. What does regional politics mean in the age of
television? Does it make any sense to talk about the idea of making
sure you have someone from the North or from the Far West if you are
from the South and the East. I think that's just one of these ideas
that has no relevance in an age of television.
LAMB: Who owns New York University?
POSTMAN: New York University is the largest private university in
America. It has about 42,000 students, I think, and about 4,000
faculty. It began in 1831, so it's one of our older institutions.
Until recently -- I'd say about 20 years ago -- it largely served
the New York City community, and I'd say 80 percent of the
accountants and lawyers and doctors and dentists in New York, at
least of my generation, had some connection with NYU. Within the
past 25 years, I'd say, it's become a great international
university, a great research institution. It's not really owned by
anyone, although, as I speak, the chairman of our board of directors
is Mr. Lawrence Tisch, who also has the controlling stock of CBS.
One might wish to say, if one were in a nasty mood, that CBS owns
NYU, but it's not really that way. NYU is doing very nicely compared
to some of the other big Eastern and private universities like
Columbia and Yale, about whom your audience perhaps has heard are
plagued with financial difficulties.
LAMB: How big is your department?
POSTMAN: We have 24 full-time professors and I'd say 700 or 800
students. New York University, I should add, has many departments of
communication, including its famous Tisch School of the Arts, which
produces all of the young and now famous movie directors. But we
have discovered that the field of communication is a fast-growing
one and will continue to grow. It's pretty obvious to many young
people that among the best ways to study any society is to study its
communication systems, its message systems. In fact, you could
almost define a culture by merely describing what are its dominant
modes of communicating with itself -- not only human to human, but
now human to machine, machine to human, machine to machine and so
on. So there's a tremendous interest in studying this subject from
an historical point of view as well as ethical and philosophical and
so on.
LAMB: How long have you been at New York University?
POSTMAN: I've been there 32 years.
LAMB: Where did you grow up?
POSTMAN: I grew up in Brooklyn, N.Y., and, just for the record, was
a devoted Brooklyn Dodger fan, which probably explains some of my
prejudices against Los Angeles, which are really quite irrational.
But if you want to understand my background, I'll tell you about --
I think it was Pete Hamill, the New York City columnist, who once
was asked who were the three most evil people in this century. He
said Adolf Hitler, Joseph Stalin and Walter O'Malley. Your audience
may not know who O'Malley was, but he was the owner of the Dodgers
who moved them to Los Angeles. But I grew up in Brooklyn and went to
school here.
LAMB: Where?
POSTMAN: Actually I started at CCNY many years ago.
LAMB: City College.
POSTMAN: I went to City College, but then went on to the State
University of New York in the western part of the state in Fredonia,
which is a notorious place because in one of the Marx Brothers'
movies, there's a place called Fredonia. But then I went on for my
graduate work to Columbia.
LAMB: And your degree is in what?
POSTMAN: I started out as an English teacher, and my graduate work
was largely in linguistics. My first job was at San Francisco State
College teaching linguistics.
LAMB: Thirteen books -- or is this the 14th?
POSTMAN: Actually it's 20 if you count the textbooks, but we'll
settle for 14.
LAMB: Just reading the liner notes. It says 13 books. Which one of
those 13, at least the consumer books, sold the most?
POSTMAN: A book that I wrote with an old friend named Charles
Weingartner called "Teaching as a Subversive Activity". That was a
book published in 1969. It was about education, and it came during
those very hectic and exciting school-reform days when many people
were writing books about that subject. I think it sold about half a
million copies. So my name first became familiar with leaders in the
field of education through that book. But obviously, in more recent
years, the book "Amusing Ourselves to Death", which I think has sold
about 200,000 copies now, and, unlike the other book, has been
extremely well-selling in Europe, especially in Scandinavia and
Germany. Very often I'm asked when I'm in Europe if I can explain
why a book like "Amusing Ourselves to Death" and another one called
"The Disappearance of Childhood" are popular in Europe.
I've given it some thought, and the best I can come up with is
something like this: the Europeans -- I'm speaking now of Western
Europe -- are about 10 years behind us in their relationship to
technology. The Germans and the Swedes and the Danes and the
Belgians look across the Atlantic and they see some of the harmful
effects of technology, as has happened here in America, so they are
more wary about technological change than Americans are. Americans
have always had a sort of lust for the new. That's a quote from de
Tocqueville. He knew that about us in the mid-19th century. We've
had a lust for the new, so we accepted technology more readily than
other people, and we have had to suffer some of the consequences of
that.
So the Europeans look at this, and they ask themselves this
question, which is a good question: "Is it possible for us to
maximize the benefits of new technologies while minimizing some of
the negative consequences? Can we, through education or political
action or social policy, inhibit technology from destroying that
which we wish to preserve?" That's a good question, and I don't know
the answer to it and they don't know the answer to it, but they're
asking it.
I like to put this sort of hypothetical issue to people. Suppose it
were 1906 and we knew what we know now about the automobile with a
combustion engine and we were able to have a conversation about it,
a national conversation, and someone listed for us all of the
benefits of the automobile, which are many, and then all of the
deficits, including that it would poison our air and choke our
cities and create the suburbs -- some people would put on that side,
but I might put on this side -- and then we said, "Let's discuss
this and then we'll have a plebiscite. We now know what it will do,
and we know what it will undo." I think most Americans would say,
"Let's go ahead with it anyway." But someone is bound to say, "Let's
go ahead with it, but is there anything we could do to reduce this
list over here, to minimize the negative consequences?"
Well, in 1906, if we had had such a conversation, even with limited
knowledge, there probably were things we could have done to reduce
the negative items on the list. When television came along, it would
have been, in theory, possible to have the same conversation. "What
are the benefits, what are the deficits? Let's talk about it and
then let's see is there anything we can plan to do that would
minimize the deficits?" Well, we didn't have such a conversation,
and with the computers now, we're not having such a conversation.
All we hear is what they will do for us. We don't hear what they
will undo. So one of the purposes of a book like this was to see if
it's possible to start such a conversation and make us more
sophisticated in our approach to our new technologies and, for that
matter, old technologies.
LAMB: How's it going?
POSTMAN: The book? It's in its forth printing.
LAMB: What does that mean?
POSTMAN: You mean how many copies?
LAMB: Yes.
POSTMAN: My guess is that at this point probably about 50,000
copies. It's, of course, available only in hardback, and we'll
probably do a lot better than that when it's in paperback. But in
addition to that, it's being adopted in many college classrooms,
which happened incidentally with "Amusing Ourselves to Death". I'm
very happy about that because I think the younger people are going
to have to think more seriously about technology than any other
group in the country, so I'm happy that it's being used in
universities.
LAMB: Do you still teach?
POSTMAN: I do. I won't be teaching in the fall because I'm an
administrator at least part of the time. That's a new experience for
me, Brian, because for 30 years I was, as I still am, a professor,
but one who had scrupulously avoided having anything to do with
administration. So I don't have as much time to devote to teaching
as I once did, but I still do teach. I will be teaching in the
spring.
LAMB: I have to ask you what's happening to you because some of your
followers will be disappointed to learn that you just got cable
television. You're going to be an administrator and have cable
television in your home. What's happening?
POSTMAN: I guess moral rot is setting in, Brian. I got cable during
the Persian Gulf War because CNN was what one had to watch to know
what was going on. But I've maintained it because what is on
traditional broadcast television I find now mostly unwatchable. I
like old movies, especially those made in the 1930s and '40s, and
there are a couple of stations that do that, and, of course, C-SPAN
is now essential, especially this program, which is one of the
reasons I was so happy when you called.
LAMB: This is not why you're here, but as an observer, it would be
interesting to know what you see on television now that you have
cable. For instance, this network is a much different pace, much
slower pace. We don't have Nielsen numbers. We know that the
audience isn't huge. We go over to another, more commercial
operation and it's a much bigger audience and all that. What do you
think the impact of the different channels is having?
POSTMAN: That's something I've had occasion to think about quite a
bit, because when I wrote "Amusing Ourselves to Death", I would have
thought that any station that had talking heads on it for any length
of time was absolutely doomed -- that people like to watch
television, not really to listen to it much but watch it, and what
they liked to watch were dynamic, exotic, fast-changing imagery,
which the networks and other commercial broadcast stations are
providing and, incidentally, as we speak, most cable stations still
provide. But I have had to modify that idea somewhat because I have
noticed that there are stations -- C-SPAN, for example, but that's
not the only one -- are quieter. The pace is slower. You don't have
a new visual image to process every 3.5 seconds, and people watch
and apparently listen and then go back and watch again. So I'm very
encouraged by that. It may be that there are limits to how much the
human psyche can take of this fast-moving imagery that has been a
characteristic of American television for many years. The Nielsen
people tell us that television is on about close to eight hours a
day in the average American household, so maybe there are limits to
how much imagery people can process. Maybe television itself created
a need in people for more quiet conversation and for human faces
that can actually be perused and studied and listened to.
LAMB: In your book you dedicate it for Faye and Manny. Who are Faye
and Manny?
POSTMAN: Faye and Manny are my deceased mother-in-law and
father-in-law, two wonderful people. In fact, in a previous book I
wrote called "Conscientious Objections", which was a group of
essays, I had occasion to write about my father-in-law Manny, who
spent all of this life not far from here on Seventh Avenue as a
dress cutter, but who was a man of exquisite taste and reason. There
were many people like that in his generation. Of course, my
mother-in-law, who died four years ago, was a very gentle and
intelligent woman, so I felt I wanted to do this.
LAMB: Madonna and Mozart?
POSTMAN: Madonna? Who's that?
LAMB: You write about Madonna. You write about Mozart, Beethoven,
and you suggest that Madonna shouldn't be the only answer for
people. What do you mean by that?
POSTMAN: Toward the end of this book, I felt I had to address the
question of what should we do about all this? Social critics are
usually not very good at answering that question. Their strong point
is telling you the bad news. But I did try to say something
positive, and I felt the answer might be in education. The idea
there is that Madonna and Bruce Springsteen and Hollywood and CBS
and all of that is not going to go away. Our young people will have
continuous access to them. I suggest, therefore, that in their
schooling there should be an emphasis on more traditional forms of
expression -- art, literature and otherwise -- not to blacken the
reputation of the popular arts, but just to make sure that the young
have access to different forms of understanding the world. Perhaps
in that way, there could be some sort of synthesis in their
education. That is, there's the sort of person Madonna and Bruce
Springsteen wants our young to be. That's OK. But there's also the
sort of person that Mozart and Dickens wanted people to be.
So I think our young have to have available to them both world
views. I'm not -- who could rule out Madonna for anything? I mean,
Time-Warner, if I'm not mistaken, just signed a $60 million deal
with Madonna, so she's going to be with us in every imaginable form.
That's all right. No one wants to stop that. But I think the
education of the young ought to pretend as if Madonna is not there
in the classroom because as soon as the children leave the
classroom, Madonna will be available to them. While they are in the
classroom someone else should be available.
LAMB: Mozart is very popular among a small percentage of the
population -- very popular. Why doesn't Mozart appeal to the younger
people or the majority of people? What is the difference in this?
POSTMAN: First of all, I'm not sure that Mozart wouldn't appeal.
LAMB: Why doesn't he?
POSTMAN: What I mean is that, in part, he is not heard enough; in
part, because his music is more complex than Bruce Springsteen. One
has to go to Mozart with a prepared imagination, a prepared mind.
But also, Brian, Mozart's music, Bach's music, Handel's music, is a
different world view. To listen to that music is to believe that
there is order in the world, that there's a design in the world,
that God's in his heaven and maybe not all is right with the world,
but that there is a pattern. It's refined and organized. One can't
help but sense that.
To listen to rock music, I think the world view is that there is no
order. I think for a lot of young people, this is the world they
know and, therefore, the rock music is consonant with their outlook.
But I would argue, this is all the more reason why the young in
school should be presented with forms of expression that presume
that there is an ordered world and that it has some meaning, that
it's not all happenstance and arbitrary. Now, I realize that's a
somewhat religious idea in itself, or certainly a transcendent sort
of idea, but it's not especially sectarian. People did believe in
the medieval world and even into Mozart's time and in the early days
of our own republic that there was order in the universe and that
everything was not just a matter of this and then this and then this
and then this and there was not way to anticipate anything.
LAMB: When you're teaching your favorite subject, what is it?
POSTMAN: These days, it's the history of technology -- not just the
description of the machinery, but the social effects of new
technology. In the book, I make the distinction among three kinds of
cultures, two using technocracies and technopolies. I want students
to know and get much satisfaction out of their reading about it and
talking about it that not all people believe technology _ber alles,
that there were people and still are people in the world who have
organized their minds and their social values on some other set of
beliefs than the redeeming quality of technology.
LAMB: What's a tool-using society today? You said there were very
few of them.
POSTMAN: I think what most people would call Third World countries
would be roughly what we might mean by a tool-using culture; that
is, people whose symbolic world -- their politics, their religion,
their education -- are not commanded and dominated by technology.
They have tools. They invent tools, but they always invent their
tools to solve problems in the physical world, but they do not let
the tools control their social and symbolic lives.
LAMB: Has a study every been done? Take the technopoly that we live
in and take a tool-using society that still exists there. Has a
study ever been done about who's really, up here in the head, happy?
POSTMAN: I don't know.
LAMB: What do you think?
POSTMAN: It's a good question. An anthropologist, Marvin Harris,
wrote a book some years ago in which he was talking about how much
time men had to spend getting food in a hunter-gatherer society, and
figured it out somehow that the average Joe Loin Cloth was probably
spending about two hours a day basically making a living and then
compared it to someone today who has to spend 10 and 12 hours a day
making a living -- if he can get a job at all. I don't think a study
would help us, Brian, because it's a question of values. Now, I do
say in the book -- despite of what some reviewers have said, I'm not
a romantic completely -- that machinery was the best hope for most
of the people who lived in the world. Before the 18th century, most
people were peasants, and life was hard, nasty, brutish, short, as
the saying goes. So there's no doubt that machinery, especially in
the age that I call a technocracy, made life better according to
values that I think most of us would accept. People lived longer.
They lived cleaner. They had more time for recreation and so on.
LAMB: Can I ask you about technocracy? You had the tool-using, and
then we're a technopoly. What's a technocracy?
POSTMAN: Technocracy is a culture in which you have serious
technology competing with a more traditional social and symbolic
world.
LAMB: Japan?
POSTMAN: Well, yes. America was a good example of this in the 19th
century. The two world views -- the technological and what you might
call the humanistic, although that loads the case, but the
traditional view of religion and education and politics and so on.
Those two worlds rub against each other, but technology is not yet
strong enough to make the traditional world irrelevant or invisible.
We go over into technopoly when the technological world overwhelms
the traditional world.
LAMB: As you know on this show, the talk is always about books, ad I
see a lot of different books. One of them was the "Truman" book by
David McCullough. It is huge. It's a thousand pages. It sells for
$30. This book here sells for $21. It may have a couple hundred
pages in it. Most of your books that I've seen have a couple hundred
pages in it. What's the strategy?
POSTMAN: It's simple. I want people to read the book and, without
talking about the book about "Truman" in particular, I think most
books are much too long. Of course, some authors write such long
books because they want to document something. They want this on the
record. But I'm more interested in readers. My books, as you say,
tend to run about 200 pages. I think I can say what I have to say in
200 pages, and I think most writers of at least nonfiction and
social criticism -- whatever you would call it -- can pretty say
what they have to say in 200 pages.
LAMB: Now, what did you say in this book that almost everybody
quotes back to you? The reviewers, the people who read it say, "Hey,
professor I read your book and you said . . ."
POSTMAN: Most of them concentrate on what I have to say about social
science. I don't say much that's very good.
LAMB: What is social science?
POSTMAN: First of all I don't think it exists. I don't think that
sociology, psychology and anthropology are sciences, and I try to
make a distinction between science and those activities. In fact, I
even think, Brian, economics really is a branch of moral theology
and should be taught more in divinity schools than in universities.
But it does disturb me that so many people have such faith in the
subjects that are called social science and go to experts to find
out how to raise children and how to fall in love and how to make
friends, as if they believe that because these subjects are
"sciences" -- in quotes here -- that they are getting verifiable,
indisputable truths about the world. So I use social science as an
example of really a technique that is part of the machinery of
technopoly. Most people who have read book, including reviewers,
seem to want to talk about that part of the book more than any
other.
LAMB: One of the things you suggest that ought to be done is that
when everything is taught, the history of it ought to be taught
along with it. Anything, I assume even economics -- where it comes
from. Why?
POSTMAN: Because if you don't teach the history of what we once knew
about biology or economics or even mathematics, then learning or
information becomes a kind of consumer product. Facts become like
something you're selling. I think what we want here is for the young
to understand that what we think we know at any given time, first of
all, is a product of what we once thought we knew. It comes from
someplace and that in the future, it will itself change. So the idea
is for a teacher to try to show the young that learning is an
historical process and that anything that we think we know now will
probably be modified in the future. History is wonderfully good for
this. History is almost the best consciousness-raising subject that
we have available for that.
LAMB: Are you going to write another book soon? Are you doing it
right now?
POSTMAN: I did it already.
LAMB: You've already written another one?
POSTMAN: Yes. It will be out in September. I wrote it with a friend
and former student named Steve Powers, who is a TV journalist. It's
called "How to Watch TV News". It's a different kind of book from
this, because it will only be out in paper and it's for a mass
market. I always wanted to write a book that people could buy in
supermarkets and in drugstores, but one that would be about
something that immediately attracts their interest. I mean the sense
that, "Oh, yes, I really should know about this because I spent an
awful lot of time watching TV news and maybe these guys know
something about it that would help me." So that'll be out in
September, I believe.
LAMB: Do you want to give us a hint about one or two major
suggestions you make in the book?
POSTMAN: It is hard to do quickly, but people do have to know
something about the economic basis of news. If you turn on a news
show or if you're a regular watcher of some particular news show and
you know nothing about how this is paid for and who makes the money
and where it comes from, then you are really quite disarmed. So we
do spend a little time in the book describing to people what kind of
money situation is involved with news shows. I think it would be
impossible -- and the best TV people have said this over and over
again; I mean people like Cronkite and Dan Rather and the rest of
them -- it would be impossible to make any sense out of the world if
you confined your knowledge of the world to TV news. You would have
to do an awful lot of reading in order to make sense out of what
you're seeing on television news. Also, maybe finally on this, I do
think people have to understand why decisions are made on TV news
shows as to what people will see and in what order. This is not done
in a haphazard way. There is a psychologic reason involved in
deciding what people will see first, what they will see next, what
they will see after that and what they won't see at all.
LAMB: The title of that book is going to be?
POSTMAN: "How to Watch TV News".
LAMB: And it's going to sell for . . .?
POSTMAN: Oh, it's not going to be expensive. I don't really know,
but probably about $5.
LAMB: In paperback?
POSTMAN: Yes
LAMB: This is what one of his books in the market at this moment
looks like. It's called "Technopoly", and our guest is Neil Postman.
Thank you very much for joining us.
POSTMAN: Thank you, Brian.
Copyright 1992 TapeWriter, Inc.
Danielle Viglione
5-1-96
Tonya Browning
Postman Down a One Way Street
Neil Postman, writer, educator, critic and communications
theorist, has written many books, in addition to his recent book
Technopoly. He is one of America's biggest and most visible cultural
critics, who attempts to analyze culture and history in terms of the
effects of technology on western culture. For Postman, it seems more
important to consider what society loses from new technology than
what it gains. To illustrate this, Postman uses the Egyptian
mythology called "The Judgment of Thamus," which attempts to explain
how the development of writing in Egyptian civilization decreases
the amount of knowledge and wisdom in the society. He traces the
roots of technology to show how technology impacts the moral and
intellectual attitude of people. Postman seems to criticize
societies with high technologies, yet he seems naive to the benefits
technology has given society. Postman is a man who is caught in a
changing world of technology who can be considered fairly
conservative in his views regarding technology. His lucid writing
style stimulates thoughts on issues in today's technological
society; however because of his moral interpretations and historical
revisions, his ethos is arguable. For every good insight he makes,
he skips another mark completely.
Postman divides history into three types. He begins his
argument with discussion of tool-using cultures. In these cultures,
technology has an "ideological bias" to action that is not thought
about by users. He says that this is a time of "logic, sequence,
objectivity, detachment, and discipline," where historical figures
such as Galileo, Copernicus, Kepler, and others clung to the
theology of their age. This was a world with God, which was
concerned with truth and not power. Postman remarks that the mass
production of books and the invention of the printing press places
"the word of God on every kitchen table." These technological
advances made possible the sharing of information, which Postman
seems to think is good. Even though this was not an age of technical
power, it still can be considered an age of power. There were many
great rulers who sat at the top of a hierarchy and controlled the
lives of the powerless, the peasants, and the impoverished. Postman
describes this culture in a positive way because he feels there was
no concern with the idea of progress, yet he fails to touch upon the
negative aspects of society. During the Medieval times, peasants
were poor and had a slim chance to move up in the hierarchical
structure of during this time. Their lives were controlled by people
that were born wealthy and very rarely did their children have
better lives than their parents. During the Industrial Revolution, "
new machines, new sources of power, and new ways of organizing work
transformed the United States from an agricultural nation to an
industrial power" (Lubar). Postman fails to mention how people of
different skill, ethnicity, race, and gender were treated poorly
during this time of heavy manual labor and repetitious factory work.
Large corporations dominated much of the American Industry and many
industrial workers called for social justice through organizations
and trade unions. Postman could have strengthened his argument by
acknowledging women throughout the book. Women, as well as blacks
and poor people, were not treated fairly due to the increase in
technology. Women fought for women's rights, and blacks fought to
improve their lifestyles and to gain freedom. During this time,
there was little effort by the government to help these people. " A
large majority of African Americans, blue collar workers, and urban
poor remained untouched by federal assistance programs" (Mack, 423).
The emphasis was on efficiency rather than humanity. Women were not
equal to men and blacks were treated differently than whites. During
this age of massive production, women and children were forced to
work long hours with little pay. Blacks did not run factories or
corporations, but they did much manual labor and factory work for
white men. The creation of new technologies allowed women ,
children, and blacks to live better lives because they created less
of a demand for manual labor and factory work. Machines, such as
computers could now do the tedious and repetitious work people once
had to do.
This society laid the foundation for the emergence of
technocracies, even though they were men, not women, of tool- using
cultures. Technocracies developed because of the increase of
knowledge and technology. People of this age want new technologies,
but realize that the life of one person is just as meaningful as
another, that humans can progress, and that poverty is evil. Bacon
was a man of this age who tried to increase human condition and make
people happier. Postman agrees with John Brown's thoughts regarding
this new technocracy. Brown says, " If you at last must have a word
to say, say neither, in the way, it is dealt magic and accursed, nor
it is blest, but only it is here" (39). Technocracies can become
dangerous when people forget what technology was good for in the
first place. Postman is correct in saying that technologies can be
dangerous. The invention of the nuclear bomb could completely
destroy the population. The crime in the United States has risen
because of the creation guns and other weapons. Homicide and suicide
have increased dramatically over the past few decades. Gangs use
weapons to kill each other and other innocent people. Ford's
invention of the automobile creates concern for pollution problems.
Mistakes can be made during operations, which could be dangerous to
the patient. Instead of spending more money and effort to develop a
cure for cancer, people are using billions of dollars to fly people
to the moon. Postman makes good insights regarding technology, yet
he fails to show how the advances of technology have helped the
people whose lives depend on technology. New methods help surgeons
save people during operations. Computers help organizations and
facilities to research and keep records, and they make people's jobs
a lot less repetitious. The invention of the printer allows people
to make several copies within minutes.
In order for a technocracy to become a technopoly, a whole
technological mindset must develop. According to Postman, "
Technology flourishes when the defenses against technology break
down" ( 71). People become conceived of markets and not citizens who
are concerned with "objective, efficient, expertise, and
standardization " ( 42). The defenses are the erosion of spiritual
values and the common high philosophies. According to Baldwin's
assessment of Postman's work, technology has over run society.
Postman describes technopoly as a "totalitarian technocracy." It
redefines what people mean "by religion, by art, by family, by
politics, by history, by truth, by privacy, by intelligence, so that
our definitions fit it's new requirements" ( 48). He explains that
two different thought worlds of tradition and technology coexist,
while tradition slowly becomes irrelevant and invisible. Whether
tradition and technology coexist may be arguable. In the past, these
two thought worlds were never married. Even though Greece develop a
extensive writing style using many symbols, they still highly valued
their rhetoric skills.
Throughout the book, Postman attempts to show that created
technopolies are far from democracies. In a democracy, power is
shared; however, in a technopoly, the power rests with the elite.
Postman seems more negative than positive toward technopolies
because he is one of the many people left out of newer technologies.
He does not have the skills of the elite; therefore he cannot
understand the thought world of technology, only of the tradition
world. According to Ravvin, Postman says that "doctors are
performing unnecessary operations because technology is available.
Politicians conduct their affairs on the basis of polls, TV programs
are good because of their rating, and computers have led to the
redefinition of humans as information processors and nature itself
as information to be progressed" (Ravvin). America has been
transformed into a world of symbols that are used to get
information. Postman seems to think that symbols destroy society,
even though symbols have made society more efficient and productive.
Voting polls produce an efficient, a quick, and a confidential way
of voting. The development of checks and credit cards allow people
carry single items, rather than carrying loads of cash. The Internet
can help students research information while sitting in one place,
rather than wondering around the library. Code words associated with
computers help keep people's work confidential.
Throughout the book, Postman seems to predict doom in an
America experiencing a down period. The technopolies emerged due to
the American character, the exploitation of economic possibilities
by American capitalists, the emphasis of alternatives, and the
deviation from old beliefs. Postman explains that the American
character has been reshaped by the new technologies. American ways
may have changed because of new technology that allows them to do
new tasks, but the character has not been reshaped. People want to
conquer the environment to conquer disease by using technology as a
weapon to decrease disease and illness. Postman seems to think this
destroys humanity, yet these new technologies have decreased
mortality rates and leave people feeling less pain. According to
Postman, the stethoscope created an objective physician who was
concerned less with the patient, but more with sounds from the body
of the patient. Medicine takes care of disease, not the patient.
This one- sided argument does not consider the obvious advances that
technology has brought to society. By taking care of disease,
physicians take care of the patient. Medical advances have treated
Polio, Mumps, and many other diseases that there were no cure for
years ago. Now, modern medicine can prevent people from dying from
many infectious diseases. Postman's argument does not acknowledge
the distinction between physicians and researchers. Advance in
research does not hurt people, rather it helps them. Physicians can
become more reliable due to new technological advances. The
stethoscope helps determine a patient's health; therefore, it can
make the doctor more reliable.
Another way technopolies emerge is through the exploitation of
economic possibilities by capitalists. With Ford's invention of the
automobile, America provided people with alternative a way of
getting around. Postman thinks that by using alternative ways to the
past people lose a sense of history and tradition. According to
Postman, people would rather watch TV than read. Families would
rather move than cling to family roots. Just because people spend
more time watching TV does not mean that they still don't take as
much pride in the old alternatives. Old beliefs change through
technology because people now think airplanes fly, radios speak, and
computers never make mistakes. When people begin to believe
technology is the sure thing, they distance themselves from
traditional ways of thinking for no other reason than to make
themselves happier and more productive. Although Postman claims that
relying on technology is detrimental to society, he does not mention
how much happier people and more efficient people have become due to
advances in technology. The invention of the automobile gave people
a faster and more efficient way of traveling, while the invention of
the plane made travel even more efficient than cars.
Lastly, technopolies emerge by losing old beliefs and values.
Postman believes a technopoly can be held in check by revitalizing
the traditional narratives about family, religion, and western
culture, but he never offers any solutions to revitalizing society.
He thinks that a new education curriculum should have the idea of
the ascent of humanity as its key principle. Every teacher must be a
history teacher; every school should offer courses in philosophy of
science and semantics; the curriculum must contain both the history
of technology, a course in comparative religion, and a course in the
historical study of art. These proposals suggest some interesting
points, but they also illustrate that Postman is armed with less
problems than solutions. New technologies are competing with old
ones for time, money, prestige, and for a world view. Technology has
taken control of students minds. Because of technology, he calls
students failures or uneducated, not because they are stupid, but
because of the war that puts the two world views of tradition and
technology in conflict. He states;
I am referring to the idea that to become educated means to
become aware of the origins and growth of knowledge and knowledge
systems; to be familiar with the intellectual and creative processes
by which the best that has been thought and said has been produced;
to learn how to participate, even if as a listener, in what Robert
Maynard Hutchins once called the Great Conversation, which is merely
a different metaphor for what is meant by the ascent of humanity. It
is education as an excellent corrective to the antihistorical,
information-saturated, technology- loving character of Technopoly (
188).
Postman stimulates the thought process with his definition of
education, but he never explains how people should progress in
schools. He attempts to explain why society should proceed, but
never attacks the question of how people should do it. Perhaps, more
time should be spent on specific subjects, instead of requiring
students to take many classes that are unrelated to each other.
Students majoring in history should not have to take many math or
science classes. Students need to learn more about the technologies
available to them, so they will have a balance between technology
and tradition. People should be taught to view the world from a
technological standpoint to understand what technology can do for
them. If Postman would have been educated in this area, he could
have presented a more well- rounded argument by looking at
technology in society from a technological perspective.
In technopoly, people improve the education of the youth by
improving what are called "learning technologies." Now, it seems
necessary to bring computers into the classroom, just as it was to
introduce writing and later film to the classroom. In order to make
learning more efficient and more interesting, people need computers.
This technical reason does not explain what learning is for and
offers an answer about means, not ends. This shows how people should
proceed, not why. Postman believes that bringing the computer to the
classroom individualizes students. Computers stand in opposition to
human affairs and is a dangerous weapon used in technology. Postman
argues that humanity and tradition are lost through the use of
computers. " Because of what computers do, they place an inordinate
emphasis on the technical processes of communications and offer very
little in the way of substance. The computer is almost all process.
There are, for example, no great computers, as there are great
writers, painters, or musicians" ( 118). This example sparks
thought, but could be an inaccurate characterization. According to
Kaplan, there are no great brushers or pencilers either. A computer
programmer and creator must be just as talented at making computers
as a painter must be at painting pictures. Teachers may use computer
programs instead of pencils and papers. These machines help people
develop equations for the problem, then people decide how to solve
them. Computers may introduce new ways, but Postman cannot just
blame the destruction of tradition on Technopolies. No one predicted
that computers would be able to do so much. The first personal
computer was not used until 1984 and was not expected to be used by
the large population today.
Although Postman blames computers and technology for
destroying some of humanity, he fails to explain how to recover the
traditions of humanity he feels are lost. "Technopoly is a state of
culture. It is also a state of mind. It consists in the deification
of technology, which means that the culture seeks authorization in
technology, finds its satisfactions in technology, and takes its
orders from technology. This requires the development of a new kind
of social order, and of necessity leads to the rapid dissolution of
much that is associated with traditional beliefs" (71). Throughout
the book, he continues to analyze what technology has done to
society, but never considers the option for recovering these
beliefs. It seems he has given up in a world of technology that is
over his head in information and knowledge. He says that information
is dangerous when " it has no place to go, when there is no theory
to which it applies, no pattern in which it fits, when there is no
higher purpose that it serves" ( 63). Information may seem dangerous
to him and many others who are unfamiliar with modern day
technology, but for people who's lives highly depend on technology,
information poses no threat. Rather, it is a needed tool for them to
live happily and survive. Postman and others not involved in the
technological society may need to be loving resistance fighters in
order to be happy and keep the traditions and beliefs they feel are
important. For other people highly involved with technology,
traditional values are not lost. The beliefs may not be as important
to these people as they are to Postman.
In conclusion, Postman offers an alternate historical and
cultural analysis of the effects of technology on western culture;
however, he writes the book from only his perspective. He leaves out
what the technological advanced people may believe and presents one
perspective, which does not offer a balanced persuasive argument.
Postman seems to focus more on what society loses from technology
than on what it gains. Postman is not part of modern technologies;
therefore he seems naive. "For such a book with such a desperate
need to criticize our technophilic society, the timid tenor of the
countermeasures offered is surprisingly and somewhat naive" (
Anthony Hempell). When he discusses the past, he fails to mention
negative aspects of society that have improved in the present.
Women, children, and blacks are treated better and have access to
the same technologies as white men. He leaves out many ways
advancements have decreased mortality rates. Today, people are not
dying of diseases that were fatal in the past. He expresses many
problems for society because of the increases in technology, but
offers no solutions. He never explains how to help children progress
in schools and he does not offer any way to recover the traditions
he feels are lost. Instead of blaming technology for the loss of
tradition and humanity, Postman should offer the technological
society ways to deal with the problems he has complained about.
People of the technological world may have lost some of the past
traditions and may seem naive to the society Postman is familiar
with; however Postman is naive to the technological world they are
familiar with. He travels down a one way street; never looking back
to acknowledge other perspectives, except for his own.
Works Cited:
Authur, Chris."Technology: The Surrender of Technology to
Culture". Contemporary Review. v264 n1540 (May 1994) Contemporary
Review Company Ltd.: 273.
Hempell, Anthony. "Technopoly: The Surrender of Culture to
Technology by Neil Postman" Hotwired Ventures CCC
http://hotwired.com/cgi-bin/interact/replies_all?msg.6585
(1984).
Kaplan, Nancy. "What Neil Postman has to Say.."
Computer-Mediated Communication Magazine v2, n3, p23
http://sunsite.unc.edu/cmc/mag/1995/mar/hyper/Postman_409.html
(March 1, 1995).
Klinghoffer, David. National Review. v42 n18 (Sept. 14, 1992)
Copyright National review Inc. :58.
Lubar, Steven." Engines of Change: The American Industrial
Revolution 1790-1860." Smithsonian Institution.
http://www.si.sgi.com/organiza/museums/nmah/homepage/docs/engin10.htm
( 1986).
Mack, John. Out of Many, v 2, Prenther- Hall, Inc (1995) :
405-423.
Moulthrop, Stuart. "Very Like a Book" Wired Subscribe. Wired
ventures LTD.http://www.hotwired.com/wired/3.11/departments/moulthrop.if.html
(1995).
Ravvin, David. "Without Judgement or Morality, Technology
becomes God" (I couldn't connect on-line so couldn't get the addess
again when I went to do it- it kept saying the file was not found).
Star, Alexander. "Technopoly: The Surrender of Culture to
Technology." New Republic. v207 n5 (July 27, 1992):59.
Weir, Stuart. Nation. v255, n6 ( Aug. 31, 1992) The Nation
Company Inc.: 216.
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