1
The Medium Is the Message In
a culture like ours, long accustomed to splitting and dividing all
things as a
means of
control , it is sometimes a bit of a
shock to be
reminded that, in operational and
practical fact ,, the medium is the
message. This is merely to say that the personal and
social consequences of any medium-that is, of any extension of
ourselves-
result from the new
scale that is introduced into our
affairs by each extension of ourselves, or by any new
technology .
Thus, with automation, for example, the new
patterns of human
association tend to eliminate jobs, it is true. That is the
negative result. Positively, automation creates roles for people, which is to
say depth of involvement in their
work and human association that our
preceding
mechanical technology had destroyed. Many people would be
disposed to say that it was not the
machine , but what one did with
the machine, that was its
meaning or message. In
terms of the
ways in
which the machine altered our
relations to one
another and to
ourselves, it mattered not in the
least whether it turned out
cornflakes or Cadillacs. The restructuring of human work and
association was shaped by the technique of fragmentation that is the
essence of machine technology. The essence of automation technology
is the opposite. It is integral and decentralist in depth, just as
the machine was fragmentary, centralist, and superficial in its
patterning of human relationships.
The
instance of the
electric light may
prove illuminating in this
connection . The electric light is
pure information... It is a medium
without a message, as it were,
unless it is used to
spell out some
verbal a ad or name. This fact, characteristic of all media, means
that the " Intent"_ of any medium is always .another
medium. The content of writing is
speech , just as the written word is
the content of
print , and print is the content of the telegraph. If
it is
asked , "What is the content of speech?," it is
necessary to say, "It is an actual
process of
thought , which is
in itself nonverbal." An
abstract painting represents direct
manifestation of creative thought
processes as they might appear in
computer designs. What we are considering
here ,
however , are the
psychic and social consequences of the designs or patterns as they
amplify or accelerate existing processes. For the "message"
of any medium or technology is the
change of scale or
pace or pattern
that it introduces into human affairs. The railway did not introduce
movement or transportation or wheel or
road into human society, but
it accelerated and enlarged the scale of previous human functions,
creating totally new kinds of cities and new kinds of work and
leisure . This
happened whether the railway functioned in a
tropical or a northern environment, and is
quite independent of the freight or
content of the railway medium. The
airplane , on the
other hand, by
accelerating the
rate of transportation, tends to dissolve the
railway form of city, politics, and association, quite independently
of what the airplane is used for.
Let
us
return to the electric light. Whether the light is being used for
brain surgery or
night baseball is a
matter of indifference. It
could be argued that
these activities are in some way the "content"
of the electric light,
since they could not
exist without the
electric light. This fact merely underlines the point that "the
medium is the message" because it is the medium that shapes and
controls the scale and form of human association and
action . The
content or uses of
such media are as
diverse as they are ineffectual
in shaping the form of human association. Indeed, it is
once too
typical that the "content" of any medium blinds us to the
charac- of the medium It is only
today that industries have become
aware of the various kinds of business in which they are engaged.
When
IBM
discovered that it was not in the business of making office
equipment or business machines, but that it was in the business of
processing information, then it began to navigate with
clear vision .
The General Electric Company
makes a
considerable portion of its
profits from, electric light bulbs and
lighting systems. It has not
yet discovered that, quite as much as A.T.& T., T., it is in the
business of moving information.
The
electric light escapes
attention as a
communication medium just
because it has no "content." And this makes it an
invaluable instance of how people fail to
study media at all. For it
is not
till the electric light is used to spell out some brand name
that it is noticed as a medium. Then it is not the light but the
"content" (or what is
really another medium) that is
noticed. The message of the electric light is like the message of
electric
power in industry, totally radical, pervasive, and
decentralized. For electric light and power are separate from their
uses, yet they eliminate time and
space factors in human association
exactly as do radio, telegraph, telephone, and TV, creating
involvement in depth.
A
fairly
complete handbook for
studying the extensions of man could be
made up from selections from
Shakespeare . Some might quibble about
whether or not he was referring to TV in these familiar lines from
Romeo and Juliet:
But
soft ! what light
through yonder window breaks? It speaks, and yet
says nothing .
In
Othello , which, as much as King
Lear , is concerned with the torment
of people transformed by illusions,
there are these lines that
bespeak
Shakespeare 's intuition of the transforming powers of new
media:
Is
there not charms By which the property of youth and maidhood May be
abus'd? Have you not read Roderigo, Of some such
thing ?
In
Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida, which is
almost completely devoted to
both a psychic and social study of communication,
Shakespeare
states his awareness that true social and
political navigation
depend upon anticipating the consequences of innovation:
The
providence that's in a watchful state
Knows almost every grain of
Plutus'
gold ,
Finds bottom in the uncomprehensive deeps,
Keeps
place with thought, and almost like the
gods Does thoughts unveil
in their dumb cradles.
The
increasing awareness of the action of media, quite independently of
their "content" or programming, was indicated in the
annoyed and
anonymous stanza:
In
modern thought, (if not in fact)
Nothing is that doesn't act,
So
that is reckoned
wisdom which
Describes the
scratch but not the
itch .
The
same kind of
total , configurational awareness that reveals why the
medium is socially the message has occurred in the most
recent and
radical
medical theories. In his
Stress o f Life, Hans
Selye tells of
the dismay of a research colleague on hearing of Selye's theory:
When
he saw me thus launched on yet another enraptured
description of what
I had
observed in
animals treated with this or that impure, toxic
material , he looked at me with desperately sad
eyes and said in
obvious despair: "But Selye, try to realize what you are doing
before it is too
late ! You have now decided to spend your
entire life
studying the pharmacology of dirt!" (Hans Selye, The
Stress o f
Life)
As
Selye deals with the total environmental situation in his "stress"
theory of
disease , so the latest
approach to media study considers
not only the "content" but the medium and the
cultural matrix
within which the
particular medium operates. The older
unawareness of the psychic and social
effects of media can be
illustrated from almost any of the conventional pronouncements.--
In
accepting an honorary
degree from the
University of Notre Dame a few
years ago, General David Sarnoff made this
statement : "We are
too
prone to make
technological instruments the scapegoats for the
sins of those who wield
them . The
products of modern
science are not
in themselves
good or bad; it is the way they are used that
determines their
value ." That is the
voice of the
current somnambulism.
Suppose we were to say, "
Apple pie is in itself
neither good nor bad; it is the way it is used that determines its
value ." Or, "The smallpox virus is in itself neither good
nor bad; it is the way it is used that determines its value."
Again , "
Firearms are in themselves neither good nor bad; it is
the way they are used that determines their value." That is, if
the slugs
reach the right people firearms are good. If the TV
tube fires the right ammunition at the right people it is good. I am not
being perverse. There is simply nothing in the Sarnoff statement that
will
bear scrutiny, for it ignores the
nature of the medium, of any
and all media, in the true Narcissus style of one hypnotized by the
amputation and extension of his own being in a new technical form.
General Sarnoff
went on to
explain his
attitude to the technology of
print, saying that it was true that print caused much trash to
circulate, but it had also disseminated the
Bible and the thoughts of
seers and philosophers. It has
never occurred to General Sarnoff that
any technology could do
anything but add itself on to what we
already are.
Such
economists as Robert Theobald, W. W. Rostow, and John Kenneth
Galbraith have been explaining for years how it is that "classical
economics "
cannot explain change or
growth . And the paradox of
mechanization is that although it is itself the
cause of maximal
growth and change, the principle of mechanization excludes the very
possibility of growth or the
understanding of change. For
mechanization is achieved by fragmentation of any process and by
putting the fragmented parts in a series. Yet, as David Hume showed
in the eighteenth century, there is no principle of causality in a
mere sequence. That one thing follows another accounts for nothing.
Nothing follows from
following , except change. So the
greatest of all
reversals occurred with electricity, that ended sequence by making
things instant. With instant
speed the
causes of things be an to
emerge to awareness again, as they had not
done with things in
sequence and in concatenation accordingly. Instead of asking which
came first , the
chicken or the egg, it suddenly seemed that a chicken
was an egg's
idea for
getting more
eggs .
Just
before an airplane breaks the
sound barrier, sound waves become
visible on the
wings of the
plane . The sudden visibility of sound
just as sound ends is an apt instance of that great pattern of being
that reveals new and opposite
forms just as the earlier forms reach
their
peak performance . Mechanization was never so vividly fragmented
or sequential as in the
birth of the
movies , the moment that
translated us beyond mechanism into the world of growth and
organic interrelation. The movie, by sheer speeding up the mechanical,
carried us from the world of sequence and connections into the world
of creative configuration and structure. The message of the movie
medium is that of transition from lineal connections to
configurations. It is the transition that produced the now quite
correct observation : "If it works, it's
obsolete ." When
electric speed
further takes over from mechanical movie sequences,
then the lines of
force in
structures and in media become
loud and
clear. We return to the inclusive form of the
icon .
To
a
highly literate and mechanized culture the movie appeared as a
world of triumphant illusions and dreams that
money could buy. It was
at this moment of the movie that cubism occurred, and it has been
described by E. H. Gombrich (Art and
Illusion ) as "the most
radical attempt to stamp out
ambiguity and to
enforce one
reading of
the
picture -that of a man-made construction, a colored
canvas ."
For cubism substitutes all facets of an object simultaneously for the
"point of view" or
facet of perspective illusion. Instead
of the specialized illusion of the third dimension on canvas, cubism
sets up an interplay of
planes and contradiction or dramatic conflict
of patterns,
lights , textures that "drives home the message"
by involvement. This is
held by many to be an exercise in painting,
not in illusion.
In
other
words , cubism, by
giving the inside and
outside , the top,
bottom, back, and
front and the
rest , in two dimensions, drops the
illusion of perspective in
favor of instant sensory awareness of the
whole . Cubism, by seizing on instant total awareness, suddenly
announced that the medium is the message. Is it not evident that the
moment that sequence yields to the simultaneous, one is in the world
of the structure and of configuration? is that not what has happened
in physics as in painting, poetry, and in communication? Specialized
segments of attention have shifted to total
field , and we can now
say, "The medium is the message" quite naturally. Before
the electric speed and total field, it was not obvious that the
medium is the message. The message, it seemed, was the "content,"
as people used to ask what a painting was about. Yet they never
thought to ask what a melody was about, nor what a house or a
dress was about. In such
matters , people
retained some
sense of the whole
pattern, of form and
function as a unity. But in the electric age
this integral idea of structure and configuration has become so
prevalent that educational theory has taken up the matter. Instead of
working with specialized "problems" in arithmetic, the
structural approach now follows the
linea of force in the field of
number and has small
children meditating about number theory and
"sets."
Cardinal
Newman said of
Napoleon , "He
understood the
grammar of
gunpowder." Napoleon had
paid some attention to other media as
well, especially the semaphore telegraph that gave him a great
advantage over his enemies. He is on record for saying that "Three
newspapers are more to be feared
than thousands bayonets."
Alexis
de Tocqueville was the first to master the grammar of print and
typography. He was thus
able to read off the message of coming change
in
France and America as if he were reading aloud from a text that
had been handed to him. In fact, the nineteenth century in France and
in America was just such an
open book to de Tocqueville because he
had learned the grammar of print. So he, also, knew when that grammar
did not
apply . He was asked why he did not write a book on
England ,
since he knew and admired England. He replied:
One
would have to have an
unusual degree of philosophical folly to
believe oneself able to
judge England in six months. A
year always
seemed to me too short a time in which to appreciate the United
States properly, and it is much easier to acquire clear and precise
notions about the American Union than about Great Britain. In America
all
laws derive in a sense from the same line of thought. The whole
of society, so to
speak , is founded upon a
single fact; everything
springs from a
simple principle. One could compare America to a
forest pierced by a multitude of
straight roads all converging on the
same point. One has only to find the
center and everything is
revealed at a glance. But in England the paths run criss-cross, and
it is only by travelling down each one of them that one can
build up
a picture of the whole.
De
Tocqueville, in earlier work on the
French Revolution , had explained
how it was the
printed word that, achieving cultural
saturation in
the eighteenth century, had homogenized the French
nation . Frenchmen
were the same kind of people from
north to
south . The typographic
principles of uniformity, continuity, and lineality had overlaid the
complexities of
ancient feudal and
oral society. The Revolution was
carried out by the new literati and lawyers.
In
England, however, such was the power of the ancient oral
traditions of common law, backed by the
medieval institution of
Parliament , that
no uniformity or continuity of the new
visual print culture could
take complete
hold . The result was that the most
important event in
English history has never taken place; namely, the English Revolution
on the lines of the French Revolution. The American Revolution had no
medieval legal
institutions to discard or to
root out, apart from
monarchy. And many have held that the American Presidency has become
very much more personal and monarchical than any European monarch
ever could be.
De
Tocqueville's contrast
between England and America is clearly
based on the fact of typography and of print culture creating uniformity
and continuity. England, he says, has rejected this principle and
clung to the
dynamic or oral common-law
tradition . Hence the
discontinuity and unpredictable quality of English culture. The
grammar of print cannot help to construe the message of oral and
nonwritten culture and institutions. The English aristocracy was
properly classified as barbarian by Matthew
Arnold because its power
and
status had nothing to do with
literacy or with the cultural forms
of typography. Said the
Duke of Gloucester to Edward Gibbon upon the
publication of his Decline and
Fall : "Another damned fat book,
eh, Mr. Gibbon? Scribble, scribble, scribble, eh, Mr. Gibbon?"
De Tocqueville was a highly literate aristocrat who was quite able to
be
detached from the
values and assumptions of typography. That is
why he
alone understood the grammar of typography. And it is only on
those terms, standing aside from any structure or medium, that its
principles and lines of force can be discerned. For any medium has
the power of imposing its own assumption on the unwary. Prediction
and control consist in avoiding this subliminal state of Narcissus
trance. But the greatest aid to this end is simply in knowing that
the spell can
occur immediately upon contact, as in the first bars of
a melody.
A
Passage to India by E. M. Forster is a dramatic study of the
inability of oral and intuitive oriental culture to meet with the
rational , visual European patterns of
experience . "Rational,"
of
course , has for the
West long meant "
uniform and
continuous and sequential." In other words, we have confused reason with
literacy, and rationalism with a single technology. Thus in the
electric age man
seems to the conventional West to become irrational.
In Forster's
novel the moment of
truth and dislocation from the
typographic trance of the West comes in the Marabar Caves. Adela
Quested's reasoning powers cannot cope with the total inclusive field
of resonance that is India. After the Caves: "Life went on as
usual, but had no consequences, that is to say, sounds did not
echo nor thought
develop . Everything seemed cut off at its root and
therefore infected with illusion."
A
Passage to India (the
phrase is from
Whitman , who saw America headed
Eastward) is a parable of
Western man in the electric age, and is
only incidentally
related to Europe or the
Orient . The
ultimate conflict between sight and sound, between written and oral kinds of
perception and organization of existence is upon us. Since
understanding stops action, as
Nietzsche observed, we can moderate
the fierceness of this conflict by understanding the media that
extend us and
raise these
wars within and without us.
Detribalization
by literacy and its traumatic effects on tribal man is the
theme of a
book by the psychiatrist J. C. Carothers, The African Mind in Health
and Disease (World Health Organization, Geneva, 195 3) . Much of his
material appeared in an article in Psychiatry
magazine , November,
1959 : "The Culture, Psychiatry, and the Written Word."
Again, it is electric speed that has revealed the lines of force
operating from Western technology in the remotest
areas of
bush ,
savannah, and
desert . One example is the Bedouin with his
battery radio on
board the camel. Submerging natives with
floods of concepts
for which nothing has prepared them is the normal action of all of
our technology. But with electric media Western man
himself experiences exactly the same inundation as the remote
native . We are
no more prepared to
encounter radio and TV in our literate milieu
than the native of
Ghana is able to cope with the literacy that takes
him out of his collective tribal world and
beaches him in
individual isolation. We are as numb in our new electric world as the native
involved in our literate and mechanical culture.
Electric
speed mingles the
cultures of prehistory with the dregs of
industrial marketeers, the nonliterate with the semiliterate and the
postliterate. Mental breakdown of varying degrees is the very common
result of uprooting and inundation with new information and
endless new patterns of information. Wyndham Lewis made this a theme of his
group of novels called The Human Age. The first of these, The
Childermass, is concerned precisely with accelerated media change as
a kind of massacre of the innocents. In our own world as we become
more aware of the effects of technology on psychic formation and
manifestation, we are losing all
confidence in our right to assign
guilt. Ancient pre
historic societies regard violent
crime as
pathetic. The
killer is regarded as we do a
cancer victim. "How
terrible it must be to
feel like that," they say. J. M. Synge
took up this idea very effectively in his
Playboy o f the Western
World.
If
the
criminal appears as a nonconformist who is unable to meet the
demand of technology that we behave in
uniform and continuous
patterns, literate man is quite inclined to see
others who cannot
conform as somewhat pathetic. Especially the
child , the cripple, the
woman , and the colored person appear in a world of visual and
typographic technology as victims of injustice. On the other hand, in
a culture that assigns roles instead of jobs to people-the
dwarf , the
skew, the child create their own spaces. They are not
expected to fit
into some uniform and repeatable niche that is not their
size anyway.
Consider the phrase "It's a man's world." As a quantitative
observation endlessly repeated from within a homogenized culture,
this phrase refers to the men in such a culture who have to be
homogenized Dagwoods in order to belong at all. It is in our I.Q.
testing that we have produced the greatest flood of misbegottten
standards. Unaware of our typographic cultural
bias , our testers
assume that uniform and continuous habits are a
sign of intelligence,
thus eliminating the ear man and the tactile man.
C.
P.
Snow , reviewing a book of A. L. Rowse (The New
York Times Book
Review, December 24, 1961) on Appeasement and the road to Munich,
describes the top level of British brains and experience in the
1930s . "Their I.Q.'s were much
higher than usual
among political
bosses. Why were they such a disaster?" The view of Rowse, Snow
approves: "They would not
listen to warnings because they did
not
wish to hear." Being anti-Red made it impossible for them to
read the message of
Hitler . But their failure was as nothing compared
to our
present one. The American stake in literacy as a technology or
uniformity applied to every level of education,
government , industry,
and social life is totally threatened by the electric technology. The
threat of
Stalin or
Hitler was
external . The electric technology is
within the
gates , and we are numb, deaf,
blind , and
mute about its
encounter with the
Gutenberg technology, on and through which the
American way of life was
formed . It is, however, no time to suggest
strategies when the threat has not
even been acknowledged to exist. I
am in the
position of Louis
Pasteur telling
doctors that their
greatest enemy was quite invisible, and quite unrecognized by them.
Our conventional response to all media, namely that it is how they
are used that
counts , is the numb stance of the technological idiot.
For the "content" of a medium is like the juicy piece of
meat carried by the burglar to distract the
watchdog of the mind. The
effect of the medium is made
strong and
intense just because it is
given another medium as "content." The content of a movie
is a novel or a play or an
opera . The effect of the movie form is not
related to its
program content. The "content" of writing or
print is speech, but the reader is almost entirely unaware either of
print or of speech.
Arnold
Toynbee is innocent of any understanding of media as they have shaped
history, but he is
full of examples that the
student of media can
use. At one moment he can seriously suggest that
adult education,
such as the
Workers Educational Association in Britain, is a useful
counterforce to the
popular press. Toynbee considers that although
all of the oriental societies have in our time accepted the
industrial technology and its political consequences: "On the
cultural plane, however, there is no uniform corresponding tendency."
(Somervell, I. 267) This is like the voice of the literate man,
floundering in a milieu of ads, who boasts, "Personally, I pay
no attention to ads." The
spiritual and cultural reservations
that the oriental
peoples may have toward our technology will avail
them not at all. The effects of technology do not occur at the level
of
opinions or concepts, but
alter sense ratios or patterns of
perception steadily and without any
resistance . The
serious artist is
the only person able to encounter technology with impunity, just
because he is an expert aware of the
changes in sense perception.
The
operation of the money medium in seventeenth-century
Japan had
effects not unlike the operation of typography in the West. The
penetration of the money
economy , wrote G. B. Sansom (in Japan,
Cresset Press, London,
1931 ) "caused a
slow but irresistible
revolution, culminating in the breakdown of feudal government and the
resumption of intercourse with foreign countries after more than two
hundred years of seclusion." Money has reorganized the sense
life of peoples just because it is an extension of our sense
lives .
This change does not depend upon
approval or disapproval of those
living in the society.
Arnold
Toynbee made one approach to the transforming power of media in his
concept of "etherialization," which he holds to be the
principle of progressive simplification and efficiency in any
organization or technology.
Typically , he is ignoring the effect of
the
challenge of these forms upon the response of our senses. He
imagines that it is the response of our opinions that is
relevant to
the effect of media and technology in society, a "point of view"
that is plainly the result of the typographic spell. For the man in a
literate and homogenized society ceases to be sensitive to the
diverse and
discontinuous life of forms. He acquires the illusion of
the third dimension and the "private point of view" as
part of his Narcissus fixation, and is quite shut off from Blake's
awareness or that of the Psalmist, that we become what we behold.
Today
when we want to get our
bearings in our own culture, and have need to
stand aside from the bias and
pressure exerted by any technical form
of human expression, we have only to
visit a society where that
particular form has not been
felt , or a historical period in which it
was unknown.
Professor Wilbur Schramm made such a tactical move in
stydying
Television in the Lives o f Our Children. He
found areas
where TV had not penetrated at all and ran some
tests . Since he had
made no study of the peculiar nature of the TV
image , his tests were
of "content" preferences, viewing time, and
vocabulary counts. In a word, his approach to the problem was a
literary one,
albeit unconsciously so. Consequently, he had nothing to
report . Had
his methods been
employed in 1500 A.D. to discover the effects of the
printed book in the lives of children or adults, he could have found
out nothing of the changes in human and social, psychology resulting
from typography. Print created individualism and nation alism in the
sixteenth century. Program and "content" analysis
offer no
clues to the
magic of these media or to their subliminal charge.
Leonard Doob, in his report Communication in
Africa , tells of one African who
took great
pains to listen each evening to the BBC news, even though
he could
understand nothing of it. Just to be in the presence of
those sounds at 7 P.m. each day was important for him. His attitude
to speech was like ours to melody-the
resonant intonation was meaning
enough. In the seventeenth century our ancestors
still shared this
native's attitude to the forms of media, as is
plain in the following
sentiment of the Frenchman Bernard Lam expressed in The Art o f
Speaking (London, 1696):
'Tis
an effect of the Wisdom of God, who created Man to be
happy , that
whatever is useful to his
conversation (way of life) is agreeable to
him . . . because all victual that conduces to nourishment is
relishable, whereas other things that cannot be assimulated and be
turned into our substance are insipid. A
Discourse cannot be pleasant
to the Hearer that is not easie to the Speaker; nor can it be easily
pronounced unless it be heard with delight.
Here
is an equilibrium theory of human
diet and expression such as even
now we are only striving to work out again for media after
centuries of fragmentation and specialism.
Pope
Pius XII was deeply concerned that there be Serious study of the
media today. On
February 17, 1950, he said:
It
is not an exaggeration to say that the future of modern society and
the stability of its inner life depend in large part on the
maintenance of an equilibrium between the
strength of the techniques
of communication and the
capacity of the individual's own reaction.
Failure
in this respect has for centuries been typical and total for mankind.
Subliminal and docile acceptance of media impact has made them
prisons without walls for their human
users . As A. J. Liebling
remarked in his book The Press, a man is not free if he cannot see
where he is
going , even if he has a gun to help him get there. For
each of the media is also a
powerful weapon with which to clobber
other media and other groups. The result is that the present age has
been one of multiple civil wars that are not limited to the world of
art and entertainment. In War and Human Progress, Professor J. U. Nef
declared: "The total wars of our time have been the result of a
series of intellectual mistakes . . ."
If
the formative power in the media are the media themselves, that
raises a
host of large matters that can only be mentioned here,
although they deserve volumes. Namely, that technological media are
staples or natural resources, exactly as are
coal and
cotton and oil.
Anybody will concede that society whose economy is dependent upon one
or two
major staples like cotton, or grain, or lumber, or
fish , or
cattle is going to have some obvious social patterns of organization
as a result. Stress on a few major staples creates extreme
instability in the economy but great endurance in the population. The
pathos and
humor of the American South are embedded in such an
economy of limited staples. For a society configured by reliance on a
few commodities accepts them as a social
bond quite as much as the
metropolis does the press. Cotton and oil, like radio and TV, become
"fixed charges" on the entire psychic life of the
community. And this pervasive fact creates the
unique cultural
flavor of any society. It pays through the
nose and all its other senses for
each staple that shapes its life.
That
our human senses, of which all media are extensions, are also fixed
charges on our personal energies, and that they also configure the
awareness and experience of each one of us, may be
perceived in
another connection mentioned by the psychologist C. G. Jung:
Every
Roman was
surrounded by slaves. The
slave and his psychology flooded
ancient
Italy , and every Roman
became inwardly, and of course
unwittingly, a slave. Because living constantly in the atmosphere of
slaves, he became infected through the unconscious with their
psychology. No one can
shield himself from such an
influence (Contributions to Analytical Psychology, London, 1928).
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