Hickory dickory dock

I just started reading Neil Postman’s Amusing Ourselves to Death, and although I’m only twelve pages in, I’m already in love with this book. Here’s a bit from page 11 on clocks, quoting Lewis Mumford:

“The clock,” Mumford has concluded, “is a piece of power machinery whose ‘product’ is seconds and minutes.” In manufacturing such a product, the clock has the effect of disassociating time from human events and thus nourishes the belief in an independent world of mathematically measurable sequences. Moment to moment, it turns out, is not God’s conception, or nature’s. It is man conversing with himself about and through a piece of machinery he created. In Mumford’s great book Technics and Civilization, he shows how, beginning in the fourteenth century, the clock made us into time-keepers, and then time-savers, and now time-servers. In the process, we have learned irreverence toward the sun and the seasons, for in a world made up of seconds and minutes, the authority of nature is superseded. Indeed, as Mumford points out, with the invention of the clock, Eternity ceased to serve as the measure and focus of human events. And thus, though few would have imagined the connection, the inexorable ticking of the clock may have had more to do with the weakening of God’s supremacy than all the treatises produced by the philosophers of the Enlightenment; that is to say, the clock introduced a new form of conversation between man and God, in which God appears to have been the loser. Perhaps Moses should have included another Commandment: Thou shalt not make mechanical representations of time.

Brilliant.

Comments

Silus Grok
Jan 5, 2009 at 9:42 pm

Postmas was a genius.

The End of Childhood, Technopoly, Teaching as a Subversive Activity … all wonderful wonderful wonderful.

I was sad when he died a few years back… the next great thinker I’ll be sad to lose will be Wendell Berry.

Ben
Jan 6, 2009 at 12:25 pm

This is my first time reading him, but I’m glad he’s got more than one book. :) I still need to read Wendell Berry…

Mr. Ballew
Jan 7, 2009 at 1:24 pm

Very interesting conceptualization.