Friday, March 27, 2020

Free Expression - The Value of Self-Fulfillment


Defending Free Expression: A Toolkit - PEN America
Our freedom of speech is one of the most foundational aspects of American history and the American experience at large. The benefits that come from maintaining the right to speak one’s mind and verbally express how they feel without facing consequences from the government are bountiful and can reach every American. These values of free expression include a more stable society, better participation in self-government, and being able to check governmental power so rights are not being infringed upon via totalitarian governments. However, the most underrated, if not most important, value of free expression that touches on the human experience at large is individual self-fulfillment.

As a theory of free expression, individual self-fulfillment suggests that freedom of speech is a value because it allows individuals to discover what they believe in, who they align themselves with (politically or non-politically), and who they are as overall. In other words, free speech helps people reach a point of satisfaction with their own lives.

This is also known as the “Self-actualization” theory. This psychological theory, created by Abraham Maslow, believes that people are able to grow to find satisfaction at the highest levels of their needs. Most notably, substantial meaning with their own lives. Maslow created a hierarchy of human needs, created in a pyramid format to highlight human growth. The basics included food, drink, oxygen, as it went past safety, love, and self-positivity, it reaches the meaning of life. Once one reached their meaning in life, they would achieve “self-actualization”, with experience of self-fulfillment and self-appreciation.
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs | Simply Psychology
This theory and value of free expression differs greatly from its original complications on individuals interacting with government, as well as being able to discover the truth. As Rodney A Smolla puts it from UScivilliberties.org, these values of free expression are concepts for the “common good.” They are built to serve and hold together the unity of American people as one entity, thereby protecting the rights and motives of the people. Now, contrast this with the self-fulfillment, which is meant to protect an individual’s human dignity and identity. Discovery of truth and protection from the government may be the central intentions free speech values, and they may be more widely applied today, but it does cause the importance of the theory of individual self-fulfillment on human dignity and human individuality to be overlooked.

I believe Individual self-fulfillment is so important when considering the values of free speech because it ties free speech to human autonomy and dignity. It enables and confirms the natural human ability to think and act for themselves, not based on anybody, or anything, else. Freedom of speech is directly related to human capacity for thought and knowledge. Individuals need to be able to access and utilize the basic human convention of thought without intervention so we can be sure that we can separate our individuality from groups we align ourselves with, which is a vital reason to protect freedom from powerful, and influential governments who can influence others. The supreme court has even supported this theory in a way by saying that, freedom of speech supports human spirit in need of “self-expression” in Procunier v Martinez (Smolla). This is why I chose this value, because I believe that without self-fulfillment, how can we be fully sure that we are truly human, or at least operating at full human capacity. It might not be the most important value of free expression, but the value of individual self-fulfillment is central to the human construct and is an underrated reason why the freedom of expression needs to be protected for individual right.

Here's a video on Maslow's Self-Actualization to learn more:



Wednesday, March 4, 2020

Radio's Beginnings


Image result for early radios
Radio technology has long been one of the most commonly used forms of mass communication that could connect people from around the world. Although its history ranges back far, its become adaptable through the years for it to still be used in the large variety of ways that it is today.

Those who work with radio in some capacity have a lot to be thankful for in German physicist Heinrich Hertz, whose work with radio waves helped him discover that it was possible for these radio waves to be transmitted wirelessly. This was the initial step towards radio technology.\

The history behind the exact creator of the radio is foggy. There had always been discussions and visions of some sort of radio communications system prior to the late 1800s, but no strides were seen until Nikola Tesla and Guglielmo Marconi made developments towards what would become known as the radio in the 1890s. There has been a debate over whether Marconi or Tesla is the true inventor of the radio.


Image result for tesla vs marconi
The debate comes from the fact that Tesla showcased a type of wireless radio around the same time that Marconi produced his wireless telegraphy. Although Tesla’s feat occurred in 1893, and Marconi only received his patent in 1896, Marconi is widely seen today as the “father and inventor of the radio”. This is because Marconi received his patent before Tesla, and also because Marconi achieved the feat of being the first to broadcast radio signals across the Atlantic in 1901.

Nevertheless, radio has been able to advance through the years. After being used to communicate on and across waters for the military during World War I, radios were able to put into everyday homes during the 20s when broadcasting corporations started to sprout up. One of the most prominent examples is the Westinghouse Company, whose commercial radio license in 1920 for the KDKA station became the first of its kind to be authorized by the U.S. government. This became home to the very first radio broadcast that was licensed by the government in 1920. As a result, radio advertisements were created as radios became much more mainstream.

In the same year Lee de Forest invented AM, or amplitude-modulated, radio. This came about as a result of his invention of a “electromagnetic radiation” detector to make the radio waves signals stronger for broadcast. This helped spawn the creation of AM radio, thereby enabling the creation of many more radio stations to run at once. The widely known FM radio wasn’t invented for another 13 years, which was done by Edwin Howard Armstrong in 1933. This frequency-modulated radio could control the noise static seen in AM radio broadcasts much more easily. With less interference between multiple radio stations, this allowed for much more room for radio players on the airwaves.

Image result for am and fm radio
Nowadays, we see radio everywhere, from our cars, to our phones, and laptops, which is interesting considering this is so different from its original use. At first glance, it seems like radio would be pushed to the side as online streaming of music has become so accessible through apps like Spotify, apple music, and tidal. Even though these apps have become so popular, radio features have still found a way to be implemented into them, with personalized radio stations for certain artists and genres within those apps. It’s impressive how radio has the ability to adapt to the technological advancements of today, and be implemented in both online and traditional radio stations and still see a wide range of use in both mediums. Personally, I see this as a good sign for the radio industry in future. Considering how adaptable radio is, I believe it will remain a mainstay in some capacity in the future as technology advances.