General
Summation of Amusing Ourselves to Death
Below includes a very brief and unfair summation of the book "Amusing Ourselves to Death." It is an incredible book and a necessary resource for architecting what is Dystil and why Dystil needs to exist. Also attached are some resources that speak to examples that should influence Dystil's architecture. Amusing Ourselves to Death (Neil Postman, 1985) argues that television and entertainment culture haven’t merely changed what we know, but how we think—turning all serious public conversation into show business. Here are the most important takeaways: 1. Huxley, Not Orwell Postman’s most famous point is that Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World is a more accurate warning than Orwell’s 1984 . Orwell feared information would be hidden from us by a totalitarian state; Huxley feared we would be destroyed by what we love —endless distraction and pleasure. Postman argues America is living out Huxley’s vision: no one needs to ban books when a population is too busy watching television to read them. 2. The Medium Shapes Thought Building on Marshall McLuhan, Postman argues that the dominant medium of a culture acts as a metaphor for how truth is established. A print-based culture encourages logic, context, history, and sustained argument. A television-based culture encourages image, emotion, fragmentation, and instant gratification. 3. The Age of Show Business When television becomes the central medium, every institution must adapt to its demands. News, politics, religion, and education are all reshaped to be entertaining, fast-paced, and visually compelling—regardless of whether the subject matter is naturally entertaining. 4. “And Now, This…” Postman uses this phrase to capture how television news destroys context. A devastating war report is followed by a commercial, then a weather forecast, then a celebrity story. The result is a stream of disconnected, decontextualized information that feels important but leads to no understanding or action. 5. Politics Becomes Image Political discourse under television is judged not by the quality of arguments but by the attractiveness of candidates, the punchiness of sound bites, and the staging of spectacles. Policy becomes less important than persona. 6. Education as Entertainment When teaching is modeled on television (e.g., fast cuts, music, humor), students learn that learning must always be fun. This undermines the patience, discipline, and tolerance for boredom required for deep, complex thought. 7. The Epistemological Crisis A culture that can only process truth through entertainment becomes incapable of dealing with serious, long-term problems. If everything must be amusing, then nothing can be truly serious—and a society that cannot take itself seriously is in danger of collapsing under the weight of issues it refuses to think about. Bottom line: Postman warns that the threat to democracy is not censorship, but the trivialization of discourse. When a culture turns everything into entertainment, it loses the capacity for critical judgment.