On the Theory of Knowledge, Theory of Progress [N2a,1]

02/12/2009

Only a thoughtless observer can deny that correspondences come into pay between the world of modern technology and the archaic symbol-world of mythology. Of course, initially the technologically new seems nothing more than that. But in the very next childhood memory, its traits are already altered. Every childhood achieves something great and irreplaceable for humanity. By the interest it takes in technological phenomena, by the curiosity it displays before any sort of invention or machinery, every childhood binds the accomplishments of technology to the old worlds of symbol. There is nothing in the realm of nature that from the outset would be exempt from such a bond. Only, it takes form not in the aura of novelty but in the aura of the habitual. In memory, childhood, and dream. ◊Dream City and Dream House, Dreams of the Future, Anthropological Nihilism, Jung◊

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