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The Mass Media Division of UNESCO Brent Jessop "Public opinion is no phenomenon sui generic. It is in part the result of government policies and by definition politicians cannot hide behind their own creation. If some sectors of public opinion in the industrialized countries are immersed in the rhetoric and slogans associated with misunderstanding, then much of this may be inherited from their political leaders. And if these leaders are in part responsible for a situation which impedes acceptance of the need for change, then they themselves must be held responsible for changing this situation." - RIO: Reshaping the International Order: A Report to the Club of Rome, 1976 [1] As the first Director of UNESCO (United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation), Sir Julian
Sorell Huxley (1887-1975) wrote a paper entitled UNESCO Its Purpose
and Its Philosophy (1946) [2] in which he outlined his vision for
the newly created international organisation (which grew out of the League
of Nations' Institute of Intellectual Co-operation). According to Huxley,
the guiding philosophy of UNESCO should be what he termed, World
Evolutionary Humanism. Part
1 in this series described this philosophy and its relation to eugenics.
The second
article outlined the purpose of UNESCO, which is to mentally prepare
the world for global political unification under a single world government.
Part
3 described the use of education by UNESCO, as an essential technique
of forming the minds of the young as well as the old. The previous
article examined the importance of the creative arts and sciences
in guiding society towards predetermined goals. This final article will
examine UNESCO's use of the mass media and other forms of communication
towards obtaining its goals.
(Article continues below) "Taking the techniques of persuasion and information and true propaganda that we have learnt to apply nationally in war, and deliberately bending them to the international tasks of peace, if necessary utilising them, as Lenin envisaged, to "overcome the resistance of millions" to desirable change. Using drama to reveal reality and art as the method by which, in Sir Stephen Tallent's words, "truth becomes impressive and living principle of action," and aiming to produce that concerted effort which, to quote Grierson once more, needs a background of faith and a sense of destiny. This must be a mass philosophy, a mass creed, and it can never be achieved without the use of the media of mass communication. Unesco, in the press of its detailed work, must never forget this enormous fact." - 60 The mass creed that Huxley called world
evolutionary humanism, is the same eugenics based creed that Charles Galton
Darwin outlined in his book The Next Million Years (1952) [3].
Among other things, C. G. Darwin was president of the Eugenics Society
(1953-59) before handing over responsibilities to Julian Huxley (1959-62).
"The detailed march of history will depend a great deal on the creeds held by the various branches of the human race. It cannot be presumed with any confidence that purely superstitious creeds will always be rejected by civilized communities, in view of the extraordinary credulity shown even now by many reputedly educated people. It is true that there may not be many at the present time, whose actions are guided by an inspection of the entrails of a sacrificial bull, but the progress has not been very great, for there are still many believers in palmistry and astrology. It is to be expected then that in the future, as in the past, there will be superstitions which will notably affect the course of history, and some of them, such as ancestor-worship, will have direct effects on the development of the human species. But superstitious creeds will hardly be held by the highly intelligent, and it is precisely the creed of these that matters. Is it possible that there should arise a eugenic creed, which - perhaps working through what I have called the method of unconscious selection - should concern itself with the improvement of the inherent nature of man, instead of resting content with merely giving him good but impermanent acquired characters? Without such a creed man's nature will only be changed through the blind operation of natural selection; with it he might aspire to do something towards really changing his destiny." - 202 For more on the importance of creeds in
shaping the future please read this
article about C. G. Darwin's The Next Million Years. "What are the main effects of these innovations [in mass communication], of which Unesco must take account? First, the possibility of a much wider dissemination of information of every sort, both within and across national boundaries. This means that public opinion can be built up more rapidly and can be better informed than ever before. [...] Other Form of Information Dissemination "[...] documentary film as a form of public relations service" - 60 [1] Quote from page 110 of Jan Tinbergen,
RIO: Reshaping the International Order: A Report to the Club of Rome
(1976). ISBN 0-525-04340-3 Related Articles
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