A thread on CS inspired me to make this one~ (A Search didn't show any threads dedicated to the subject)
To Cut & Paste my own stuff:
The book Fahrenheit 451 is about the evils of television and other mass media (including addiction to it and the resultant apparent "dumbing down" of people as a result), NOT about burning books or censorship. Well, at least according to some guy called Ray Bradbury, anyway, what would he know? ~_~ According to what is possibly urban legend, he has been "corrected" by at least one classroom audience during a speech about the work (at UCLA), causing him to walk out on them.
Some people refer to (roughly) 450F as the auto-ignition point of book paper; others say it's more like 450C. YMMV.
The book predicted, among other things: flat-screen TV's and "media walls", surround sound, the increasing spectre of the "death" of print media, and tiny little wireless electronic devices that sit in your ear that allow for 2-way communication over long distances -- in other words, Bluetooth headsets, wireless earbuds, and similar devices. IIRC, jetpacks, too, but we haven't quite mastered those. Yet. Oh yeah, and unmanned flying drones.
[replying to another post:] It's not so much that the people do not WANT to read books (some of them do, despite that being, in effect, a capital crime) -- it's that TV has supplanted print media completely, and books are seen as archaic and useless artifacts of the past in their society.
Also, there is at least a hint of the underlying notion that broadcast media is easier to control. People who have become addicted to the tube (read: the overwhelming majority of the populace in that setting) will watch what they are shown, generally believe what the mighty glowing screens tell them. Books cannot be so easily controlled, unless, of course, you digitize them all and convince everybody to download them all onto wireless-net-connected electronic devices whose contents can potentially be altered at will by those who control the source of said texts...
Wait a sec... >_>
By burning all of the books, any works that disagree with <people in charge>'s views on "the way things should be" cannot exert undue influence simply because they no longer exist.
What do you guys think?
To Cut & Paste my own stuff:
The book Fahrenheit 451 is about the evils of television and other mass media (including addiction to it and the resultant apparent "dumbing down" of people as a result), NOT about burning books or censorship. Well, at least according to some guy called Ray Bradbury, anyway, what would he know? ~_~ According to what is possibly urban legend, he has been "corrected" by at least one classroom audience during a speech about the work (at UCLA), causing him to walk out on them.
"Fahrenheit 451 is not about the topic of censorship. Rather, it is a story of how television destroys interest in reading literature, leading to a replacement of knowledge with “factoids”: partial information devoid of context." - attr. to Ray Bradbury
The book predicted, among other things: flat-screen TV's and "media walls", surround sound, the increasing spectre of the "death" of print media, and tiny little wireless electronic devices that sit in your ear that allow for 2-way communication over long distances -- in other words, Bluetooth headsets, wireless earbuds, and similar devices. IIRC, jetpacks, too, but we haven't quite mastered those. Yet. Oh yeah, and unmanned flying drones.
[replying to another post:] It's not so much that the people do not WANT to read books (some of them do, despite that being, in effect, a capital crime) -- it's that TV has supplanted print media completely, and books are seen as archaic and useless artifacts of the past in their society.
Also, there is at least a hint of the underlying notion that broadcast media is easier to control. People who have become addicted to the tube (read: the overwhelming majority of the populace in that setting) will watch what they are shown, generally believe what the mighty glowing screens tell them. Books cannot be so easily controlled, unless, of course, you digitize them all and convince everybody to download them all onto wireless-net-connected electronic devices whose contents can potentially be altered at will by those who control the source of said texts...
Wait a sec... >_>
By burning all of the books, any works that disagree with <people in charge>'s views on "the way things should be" cannot exert undue influence simply because they no longer exist.
What do you guys think?
Comment