Looking for more examples of historical "mass consciousness" like these 1. Marxist class consciousness 2. Calvinist protestant ethic 3. Meiji restoration 4. European renaissance 5. "Dark" ages 6. Neoliberalism 7. "Organization Man" 8. Christianization of Europe ...??
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Replying to @vgr
French Revolution, Scientific Revolution, Romantic Period, Periclean Athens, 1848, Enlightenment, China’s May 4th Movement, the Gilded Age, Manifest Destiny, Russian Revolution (February)
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Replying to @zenpundit @vgr
Iconoclasm movement, Byzantines. Taiping Rebellion China
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Replying to @zenpundit
Is there a good academic-historical definition of "mass consciousness" in terms of correlates of mass (not elite) patterns of cognition?
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Replying to @vgr
That’s a great question. Which I define as I don’t know the answer
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Replying to @zenpundit @vgr
Technically I’m not sure ppl in the early Renaissance knew it but they did toward the end as it moved northward
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Replying to @zenpundit
My suspicion is, you never notice the dawns, only the dusks. Old consciousnesses falling apart leave you adrift in anomie. New ones forming around you are only noticed when they in turn fall apart.
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Replying to @vgr
Especially without mass communication ( like on Roman or Athenian scale - not modern though that increases it) that complex societies develop
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Strikes me though, that the arrival of characteristic infrastructure (roman roads, railroads, social-programming commodities like tobacco) can serve to mark the dawn of a consciousness as strongly as communicated texts. Don't need a Gutenberg press or stone-carved edicts.
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Replying to @zenpundit
hmm wonder how quickly news of Columbus' and Vasco De Gama's voyages spread on both ends. There was a great magazine article I can't find about how coastal native americans processed the arrival of Europeans.
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