Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television
(Page 13 of 13)
September/October 1979
By the Mother Earth News editors
And so it goes in all areas. The religions of the world, from Tibetan Buddhism to many forms of Catholicism, are deeply rooted in the rich interplay of the human mind and senses. On television they must be understood through fixed cerebral channels, leaving description, but no feeling. The same can be said for most cultures of the world, still immersed in the sensory relationships between human and environment. There is no way to effectively convey African cultures, as was mentioned, through images disconnected from the other senses, and certainly not through logical analysis. More often than not these cultures and others are sensually or mystically based and can be deeply understood only in those terms. Unfortunately, television makes the effort to explain them anyway, just as it claims to convey nature, the arts, the news and the details of human feeling.
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Human beings who view these attempts are led to believe that these fuzzy little pellets of information about our rich, subtle, complex and varied world constitute something close to reality... What they really do is make the world as fuzzy, coarse, and turned-off as the medium itself.
EDITOR'S NOTE: The second part of Jerry Mander's fourth argument for the elimination of television will be published in MOTHER NO. 60.
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