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Saturday Review (McLuhan)

 

[from postulates that help understand Marshall McLuhan:]

Life imitates art. We shape our tools and thereafter they shape us. These extensions of our senses begin to interact with our senses. These media become a massage. The new change in the environment creates a new balance among the senses. No sense operates in isolation. The full sensorium seeks fulfillment in almost every sense experience. And since there is a limited quantum of energy available for any sensory experience, the sense-ratio will differ for different media....

We shaped the alphabet and it shaped us... And once a culture uses such a medium [print] for a few centuries, it begins to perceive the world in a one-thing-at-a-time, abstract, linear, fragmented, sequential way. And it shapes its organizations and schools according to the same premises. The form of print has become the form of thought. The medium has become the message.
-- J.M. Culkin. A schoolman's guide to Marshall McLuhan. Saturday Review, (March 18, 1967) pp. 51-53, 71-72. [Reprinted in McLuhan Pro & Con, Raymond Rosenthal, ed. (1968).
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