[Air-l] habermas on the internet
radhika gajjala
radhika at cyberdiva.org
Wed Mar 29 03:26:33 PST 2006
Depends who the "intellectuals" concerned are - if he means
traditional elite intellectuals "focusing" in traditional form - why
yes ...
>"Use of the Internet has both broadened and fragmented the contexts
>of communication. This is why the Internet can have a subversive
>effect on intellectual life in authoritarian regimes. But at the same
>time, the less formal, horizontal cross-linking of communication
>channels weakens the achievements of traditional media. This focuses
>the attention of an anonymous and dispersed public on select topics
>and information, allowing citizens to concentrate on the same
>critically filtered issues and journalistic pieces at any given time.
>The price we pay for the growth in egalitarianism offered by the
>Internet is the decentralised access to unedited stories. In this
>medium, contributions by intellectuals lose their power to create a
>focus."
>
> From Habermas's Kreisky prize lecture printed in Der Standard March
>10-11 translated in part in signandsight.com. thoughts?
>
>
>jeremy hunsinger
>jhuns at vt.edu
>www.cddc.vt.edu
>wiki.tmttlt.com
>www.tmttlt.com
>
>() ascii ribbon campaign - against html mail
>/\ - against microsoft attachments
>http://www.stswiki.org/ sts wiki
>http://cfp.learning-inquiry.info/ LI-the journal
>
>
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