ForumGarden  

Home Who's Online Today's Posts Mark Forums Read
Go Back   ForumGarden > General Forums > Philosophy
Forums Casino Geo Photo Blogging Site Rules Arcade


Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 10-28-2009, 01:21 AM   #1 (permalink)
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 1,446
We perceive our self as an object

We perceive our self as an object

‘Object is container’ is, I think, a useful metaphor. The object has an inside and an outside with a boundary separating the two. It is possibly the reason we think of the existence of souls and spirits. Humans think about them self as an object. We see an example of this interior and exterior when we communicate on the Internet. In our face-to-face communication in the real world the exterior of a person becomes very important in our concept of that person. On the Internet such is not the case and this fact causes situations between the two modes of communication.

When most people contact one another there is only a combining of exteriors. Few occasions develop when two people make a significant contact of interiors. James Baldwin put it succinctly when he said “mirrors can only lie”. The mirror exposes only the exterior and says nothing about the interior; I find that, as I grow older, I have less and less exterior about which to communicate and communication about the interior seems much easier with total strangers on the Internet than with those close to me.

Marshall McLuhan was particularly interested in Technology as Extension of the Human Body. “An extension occurs when an individual or society makes or uses something in a way that extends the range of the human body and mind in a fashion that is new. The shovel we use for digging holes is a kind of extension of the hands and feet. The spade is similar to the cupped hand, only it is stronger, less likely to break, and capable of removing more dirt per scoop than the hand. A microscope or telescope is a way of seeing that is an extension of the eye.”

Going further in this vein the auto is an extension of the foot. However there are negative results from all such extensions. “Amputations” represent the unintended and un-reflected counterparts of such extensions.

“Every extension of mankind, especially technological extensions, has the effect of amputating or modifying some other extension… The extension of a technology like the automobile "amputates" the need for a highly developed walking culture, which in turn causes cities and countries to develop in different ways. The telephone extends the voice, but also amputates the art of penmanship gained through regular correspondence. These are a few examples, and almost everything we can think of is subject to similar observations…We have become people who regularly praise all extensions, and minimize all amputations. McLuhan believed that we do so at our own peril.”

McLuhan was concerned about man's willful blindness to the downside of technology. In his later years McLuhan developed a scientific basis for his thought around what he termed the tetrad. The tetrad is four laws, framed as questions, which give us a useful instrument for studying our culture. What does it (the medium or technology) extend?
What does it make obsolete? What is retrieved? What does the technology reverse into if it is over-extended?


McLuhan’s gravestone carries the inscription The Truth Shall Make You Free. We do not have to like or even agree with everything that McLuhan said. However, we would be wise to remember that his was a life of great insight and it was dedicated to showing wo/man the truth about the world we live in, and especially the hidden consequences of the technologies we develop.

In the book The Birth and Death of Meaning Earnest Becker provides us with a synthesis of the knowledge about the extensions of the human body that McLuhan spoke of and science certified through research.

Becker informs us that the “self” is in the body but is not part of the body; it is symbolic and is not physical. “The body is an object in the field of the self: it is one of the things we inhabit…A person literally projects or throws himself out of the body, and anywhere at all…A man’s “Me” is the sum total of all that he can call his, not only his body and his mind, but his clothes and house, his wife and children, [etc].” The human can be symbolically located wherever s/he thinks part of her really exists or belongs.

It is said that the more insecure we are the more important these symbolic extensions of the self become. When we invest undue value onto such matters as desecrating a piece of cloth that symbolizes our nation is an indication that our self-valuation has declined and this overvaluation of a symbol can help compensate that loss. We get a good feeling about own value by obtaining value in the pseudopod as the flag.

In conceiving our self as a container that overflows with various and important extensions that our technology provides us we might appear like a giant amoeba spread out over the land with a center in the self. These pseudopods are not just patriotic symbols and important things but include silly things such as a car or a neck tie. We can experience nervous breakdowns when others do not respect our particular objects of reverence.

Local Time: 06:28 AM
Local Date: 11-21-2009
coberst is online now  
Reply With Quote
Old 10-28-2009, 03:39 AM   #2 (permalink)
Black sheep again!
Supporting Member
 
Join Date: May 2005
country flag
Posts: 5,558
Re: We perceive our self as an object

Quote:
Originally Posted by coberst View Post
We perceive our self as an object

‘Object is container’ is, I think, a useful metaphor.
If I have to see myself as an object, I think I must be a tupperware box.
__________________

Local Time: 02:28 PM
Local Date: 11-21-2009
Rapunzel is offline  
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Do we perceive it because it is meaningful? Yes! coberst Philosophy 3 09-07-2009 11:06 AM
Can I Think of Me? coberst Philosophy 0 05-01-2009 03:55 AM
You are the Music While the Music Lasts--T.S. Eliot coberst Philosophy 0 10-17-2008 03:56 AM
Soviet Army fought UFOs CVX Paranormal Science 1 08-12-2004 12:01 PM
Phoenix, Arizona Object - What Is It ? CVX Paranormal Science 0 08-07-2004 01:57 AM


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 07:28 AM.


Copyright ©2009, Digitalfog, LLC All Rights Reserved.

Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.2.0