PART TWO
THE
CONTRIBUTION OF THE COMMUNICATIONS MEDIA
TO HUMAN PROGRESS
CHAPTER
I
THE
WORK OF THE MEDIA IN HUMAN SOCIETY
19. The modern media of
social communication offer men of today a great round table. At this they are
able to participate in a world-wide exchange in search of brotherhood and
cooperation. It is not surprising that this should be so, for the media are at
the disposal of all and are channels for that very dialogue which they
themselves stimulate. The torrent of information and opinion pouring through
these channels makes every man a partner in the business of the human race.
This interchange creates the proper conditions for that mutual and sympathetic
understanding which leads to universal progress.
20. The swift advances of the
means of social communication tear down the barriers that time and space have
erected between men. They can make for greater understanding and closer unity.
A mass of information is continually on the move to and from all parts of the
world and, as a result, men can learn what goes on and how other men live.
Teaching at all levels has benefited by the use of these aids. These media play
their part in eliminating illiteracy and in providing both basic and further
education. They can, very effectively, help people in developing countries to
achieve progress and freedom. They can establish a measure of universal
equality in which all men, whatever their place in society can enjoy the
delights of culture and leisure. They enrich men's minds. They help them to
keep in touch with reality by providing the sights and sounds which are the
very stuff of life. They bring far away times and places within their grasp.
And when illiteracy is rife - and this is not in any way to question the
validity of traditional cultures - citizens can quickly be brought in touch
with recent developments in modern ways of life.
21. In the light of these
advantages, the communications media can be seen as powerful instruments for
progress. It is true they present difficulties but these must be faced and
overcome. Both the communicators and the recipients ought to be aware of their
inherent dangers and difficulties. For instance, how can we ensure that this
swift and haphazard and endless stream of news is properly evaluated and
understood? The media are bound to seek a mass audience and so they often adopt
a neutral stance in order to avoid giving offence to any section of their
audience. How, in a society that is committed to the rights of dissent, is the
distinction between right and wrong, and true and false, to be made?
How in the face of competition to capture a
large popular audience are the media to be prevented from appealing to and
inflaming the less admirable tendencies in human nature? How can one avoid the
concentration of the power to communicate in too few hands so that any real
dialogue is killed? How can one avoid allowing communications made indirectly
and through machinery to weaken direct human contact - especially when these
communications take the form of pictures and images? When the media invite men
to escape into fantasy, what can be done to bring them back to present reality?
How can one stop the media encouraging mental idleness and passivity? And how
can one be certain that the incessant appeal to emotion does not sap reason?
22. It is obvious that there
has been a decline in moral standards in many areas of life today and this
decline is the cause of profound concern to all honest men. It is easy to find
evidence of this decline in all the means of social communication. But how far
these means must be blamed for the decline is open to question. Many
responsible men hold that these means are only a reflection of what already
exists in society. Others hold that they increase and spread those tendencies
and that, by making them commonplace, lead to their gradual acceptance. And
still others would put most of the blame squarely upon the means of social
communication. What is certainly true is that the weakness lies in society
itself and that the attempt to restore standards must involve the whole of
society, its parents, teachers, pastors and all who care about the common good.
In this attempt the means of social communication have no small part to play.
It is however impossible to put the means of social communication into a quite
separate category from that of the everyday life and attitudes of the people.
23. In order that the
benefits offered to society by social communications can be better understood
and used to the full and the incidental difficulties they present set aside,
the chief aspects of the working of the media among men must be investigated.
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