A virtuális tömegek lázadása

Authors

  • György Csepeli Eötvös Lóránd University of Sciences, Budapest

Keywords:

chaos

Abstract

The Revolt of Virtual Masses

In my presentation, I compare the crowd turned into a shapeless, deformed mass of humans gathered in a real, material sphere with psychological processes taking place in virtual space, which without direct coexistence provokes the same self-loss and regression than real crowds. In the case of virtual masses, the situation is different, people who constitute the mass orientate in the world encompassed by the internet with the help of social media. In the context of social media there is no good, bad, true and false. Communication is constantly dominated by the euphoric and obsessed sensations and the participants do not realize the algorithms delivered by the Big Data, through these they become unrestrictedly influenced. Creation turns into the wrong way.

References

CSEPELI, Gy., 2008. Wiki Knowledge. Resurgence of the Collective Mind, in Nyiri K. (ed.): Integration and Ubiquity. Towards a Philosophy of Telecommunications Convergence, Vienna, Passagen Verlag, 255-262.

DENNETT, D., 2017. From Bacteria to Bach and Back. The Evolution of Minds, New York, W.W. Norton.

FREUD, S., 1995. Tömegpszichológia, Budapest, Cserépfalvi.

GASSET, José Ortega y. 1995, A tömegek lázadása, Budapest, Pont.

HEIDEGGER, M., 1989. Lét és idő, Budapest, Gondolat.

HUI Kyong Chun, W., 2017. Updating to Remain the Same: Habitual New Media, MIT Press.

MARGETTS, H., John, P., Hale, S. és Yasserei, T,. 2016. Political Turbulence. How social media shape collective action, Princeton, NJ, Princeton University Press.

NIETZSCHE, F., 2003. A tragédia születése, Budapest, Magvető.

PATAKI, Ferenc, 1998. A tömegek évszázada, Budapest, Osiris.

RIESMAN, D., 1968. A magányos tömeg, Budapest, Közgazdasági és Jogi Kiadó.

TACITUS, Összes művei. II. Évkonyvek, Budapest, Európa.

Downloads

Published

07-08-2020

How to Cite

Csepeli, G. (2020) “A virtuális tömegek lázadása”, Symbolon, 18(1(32), pp. 17–21. Available at: http://uartpress.ro/journals/index.php/symbolon/article/view/88 (Accessed: 22 November 2024).

Issue

Section

Articles