"Glass... helped to alter the very concept of self. In a small way, glass had been used for mirrors by the Romans; but the background was a dark one, and the image was no more plain than... the polished metal surface. By the sixteenth century, even before the invention of plate glass that followed a hundred years later, the mechanical surface of the glass had been improved to such an extent that, by coating it with a silver amalgam, an excellent mirror could be created. ...For perhaps the first time, except for reflections in the water and in the dull surfaces of metal mirrors, it was possible to find an image that corresponded accurately to what others saw. ...The use of the mirror signalled the beginning of introspective biography in the modern style... The self in the mirror corresponds to the physical world that was brought to light by natural science in the same epoch: it was the self in abstracto... the more accurate the physical instrument, the more sufficient the light on it, the more relentlessly does it show the effects of age, disease, disappointment, slyness, covetousness, weakness... quite as clearly as health, joy and confidence. Indeed, when one is completely whole and at one with the world one does not need the mirror: it is in the period of psychic disintegration that the individual... turns to the lonely image to see what in fact is there and what he can hold on to; and it was in the period of cultural disintegration that men began to hold the mirror up to outer nature."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Lewis Mumford, ' (1934)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/History_of_technology
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
History of technology
is the history of the invention of tools and techniques and is similar to other sides of the history of humanity. Technology can refer to methods ranging from as simple as language and stone tools to the complex genetic engineering and information technology that has emerged since the 1980s. The term technology comes from the Greek word , meaning art and craft, and the word logos, meaning word and speech. It was first used to describe applied arts, but it is now used to described advancements an
24 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by History of technology →
Related Quotes
"Cease from grinding, ye women who toil at the mill; sleep late, even if the crowing cocks announce the dawn. For has …"
"The application of clay to the making of vases probably soon caused the invention of the potter's-wheel, before which…"
"Although none of the very ancient kilns have survived the destructive influence of time, yet among all the great nati…"
"With the advent of metal tools in the and later in the the arts of wood-working became more precise and more speciali…"
"To rob Britain of her steam engines would be to rob her of her coal and iron, to deprive her of her sources of wealth…"
"The hand-axe, made of sandstone, quartz, or lava as well as of flint, served mankind for at least a thousand centurie…"
"The industrial revolution was well under way before the steam-engine came into general use... Only two prime-movers—t…"
"It has sometimes been suggested that the wall paintings carried out by the hunters in southwestern France in caves du…"
"Tradition has it that not only concerned himself with the unification of Egypt but also with the control of the river…"
"The centre we have chosen is that of the cotton manufacture; a branch of commerce, the rapid and prodigious increase …"