Public-opinion-by Walter-lippmann →
For in the late summer of 1914, these people continued to live, work, and socialize together in peace. They shared meals, traded goods, and treated each other as friends. However, unknown to them, the great powers of Europe had already declared war. For those six weeks, while they acted as friends, they were technically enemies. The Lesson: The "Pseudo-Environment"
He believed the "omnicompetent citizen" (someone who knows everything about every political issue) is a myth. Instead, the public is often a "phantom"—disengaged and overwhelmed by information they cannot verify. Full article: Walter Lippmann and Public Opinion
Lippmann begins with a story about a small, remote island in the ocean in . On this island lived a few Englishmen, Frenchmen, and Germans. Because no telegraph cables reached the island and the mail steamer only arrived every sixty days, news was incredibly slow to reach them. Public-Opinion-by Walter-Lippmann
If you’re looking to understand Walter Lippmann’s landmark book Public Opinion (1922), the most helpful "story" is actually the opening anecdote he uses to explain his central theory: . The Story of the Island
Lippmann uses this story to illustrate that we do not react to the real world, but to a —a mental map of the world that we build from reports, stories, and pictures. The Reality: World War I had begun. For in the late summer of 1914, these
The people on the island acted based on their mental picture of peace, even though the reality was war. Key Takeaways from the Book
On the island, the "world" was still at peace. For those six weeks, while they acted as
He argued that because the "Great Society" is too complex for any one person to fully understand, elites and media must "manufacture consent" to guide public opinion.