Fear and Fragility: The Glass Delusion and Its History (publicdomainreview.org)

by Petiver 7 comments 28 points
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7 comments

[−] gausswho 54d ago
Intriguing article. The pattern is compelling, that perhaps there is something in the human condition that is attracted to the idea 'i'm made of this newly arrived magical stuff, and you can't prove otherwise'. New generations get to choose new stuff.

I'm reminded of Goethe's description of an athiest as a person with 'no invisible means of support'.

As I was reading, I was hoping to find an aside about the role of lead in glass production, but I suppose that'd be a distraction.

[−] ashwinnair99 54d ago
The Glass Delusion is one of those medieval conditions that sounds made up until you read about it. Says a lot that we had a named syndrome for people who thought they were made of glass.
[−] Insanity 54d ago
The way we humans see ourselves depends a lot on the technology of the time. An example I quite like is that when steam engines were all the rage, Freud compared the brain to a steam engine. Now that computers are all the hype, we compare the human brain to computers.

Intuitively the latter does feel closer to the truth (although maybe quantum computer would be even closer to reality). Or maybe that's just our contemporary lens of viewing technology and our place in the world, who knows what's next in a few hundred years. :)

edit: link for more context https://metaphors.iath.virginia.edu/metaphors/24583

[−] nradov 54d ago
It's the same with some other mental health conditions. Centuries ago people with schizophrenia would hallucinate visions of angels or demons. Now they see "aliens". Expectations and interpretations are culturally programmed.
[−] pasquinelli 54d ago
i personally never found that a compelling analogy, just because we do understand computers but we don't understand the brain.

but i guess that's the rhetorical move being used, substitute something the audience doesn't understand with something they do understand.