The new age
Sections
- 1. Segment 1 (01:02)
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- 26. Segment 26 (00:13)
- 1. Segment 1 (00:14)
- 2. Segment 2 (00:12)
- 3. Segment 3 (00:13)
- 4. Segment 4 (00:23)
- 5. Segment 5 (00:22)
- 6. Segment 6 (00:20)
- 7. Segment 7 (00:25)
- 8. Segment 8 (00:17)
- 9. Segment 9 (00:26)
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- 11. Segment 11 (00:34)
- 12. Segment 12 (00:45)
- 13. Segment 13 (00:13)
- 14. Segment 14 (00:53)
- 15. Segment 15 (00:40)
- 16. Segment 16 (01:34)
- 17. Segment 17 (00:34)
- 18. Segment 18 (00:50)
- 19. Segment 19 (00:29)
- 20. Segment 20 (00:37)
- 21. Segment 21 (00:38)
- 22. Segment 22 (00:32)
- 23. Segment 23 (00:56)
- 24. Segment 24 (00:36)
- 25. Segment 25 (00:38)
- 26. Segment 26 (01:10)
- 27. Segment 27 (00:14)
- 28. Segment 28 (01:01)
- 29. Segment 29 (00:18)
- 30. Segment 30 (01:56)
- 31. Segment 31 (00:18)
- 32. Segment 32 (00:48)
- 33. Segment 33 (00:20)
- 34. Segment 34 (00:52)
- 35. Segment 35 (00:15)
- 36. Segment 36 (00:59)
- 37. Segment 37 (00:33)
- 38. Segment 38 (00:49)
- 39. Segment 39 (00:38)
- 40. Segment 40 (00:48)
- 41. Segment 41 (00:31)
- 42. Segment 42 (00:49)
- 43. Segment 43 (00:12)
- 44. Segment 44 (00:28)
- 45. Segment 45 (00:34)
- 46. Segment 46 (00:23)
- 47. Segment 47 (00:22)
- 48. Segment 48 (00:12)
- Date
1964
- Summary
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Mr. Hoffer begins his discussion of “The New Age” by pointing out that it is generally, though falsely, referred to in America as the “Age of the Masses” (i.e. mass communications, mass consumption, mass production). He explains that it is no longer the masses who control the political and economic life of the country. In politics, it is the intellectual who is the general, the diplomat, the ruler. Economically, with the rise of automation, it is the intellectual with the machine who is replacing the many laborers and their hands. Mr. Hoffer then compares the intellectual of the past and present in this country. In the past, the intellectual of America, in much the same manner as today’s European, Asian and African intellectual, was a colonial and ruled with the attitude of a colonial. He demanded absolute obedience and power, and his interests were not so much with the needs of the masses as with the construction and initiation of imposing works and great ideas. In contrast to the “Old Colonialism” of America’s intellectual of the past, the “New colonialist” intellectual of America today rose from the masses and his interests lie with the needs and demands of the masses. Mr. Hoffer describes the “New Colonialist” intellectual as “the man in the business suit who looks like everyone else.” Economically, he is interested in wages, clothing and feeding the people. Politically, he wants not blind obedience but the enthusiastic approval and support of the masses for his projects and ideas. He concludes by stating his believe that the “Old Colonialism” of today’s European, Asian and African intellectual leaders should learn from the “New Colonialism” of America.
- Contributors
Eric Hoffer; James Day; Winifred Murphy; Bernie Stoffer; KQED, San Francisco
- Publishers
National Educational Television; Indiana University Audio-Visual Center
- Genres
Educational; Interview
- Subject
Philosophy
- Collection
National Educational Television
- Unit
IUL Moving Image Archive
- Language
English
- Rights Statement
- No Copyright - United States
- Other Identifiers
Other: GR00466335; MDPI Barcode: 40000003177211; MDPI Barcode: 40000003112978
Access Restrictions
This item is accessible by: the public.