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Essay / The Real Use of Subliminal Messages - 1141
There is a constant and ongoing battle for control of society's thoughts. Big, money-hungry media companies use mass media to embed subliminal messages in hopes of influencing your thoughts. Using subliminal messages can impact your decision-making, and you won't even realize it. It is a subtle manipulation tool first used in the late 19th century. The dictionary definition of subliminal refers to the unconscious and exists or operates below the threshold of consciousness. (dictionary.com) Therefore, a subliminal message is a message received by our unconscious mind. Research has shown that subliminal messages only work if they match a biological need and the behavior is associated with a positive effect. (NWO) The idea is to get people to behave in a particular way by planting an idea in their minds, also known as priming. This raises the question of who uses subliminal messages, why do they use them, and how do they use them? The idea of using subliminal messages in mass media had to start somewhere. Early on, American intellectual, writer, and two-time Pulitzer Prize winner Walter Lippman influenced government leaders to create a like-minded society. His argument was that it is easier to control the masses when they all think the same thing. (Lippman) This idea adhered to the psychology taught by Carl Jung. Carl Jung's thesis arises from the Concept of the collective unconscious: "My thesis is therefore this: besides our immediate consciousness, which is of a deeply personal nature and which we believe to be the only empirical psyche (even if we nail down the personal unconscious in the appendix), there is a second psychic system of a ...... middle of paper ...... the archetypes and the collective unconscious. 2nd ed. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1980-1959. Printed. Leroux, Kivi. “Subliminal messages”. E: The Environmental Magazine 10.4 (1999): 14. Reference Center Viewpoints. Internet. April 10, 2014. Lippmann, W. (1991). Public opinion. New Brunswick, NJ, USA: Transaction Publishers. Miele, Frank. “OPINION: What We Know and What We Think We Know: Delving into the Propaganda Factory.” Daily Inter Lake (Kalispell, MT) March 17, 2012: Viewpoint Reference Center. Internet. April 10, 2014. NWO (Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research). “Subliminal messages motivate people to actually do things they already wanted to do.” ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, July 1, 2009. Web. April 10, 2014. O'Neill, Ian. "Can we really be influenced by subliminal messages? - Curiosity." Curiosity. Np, and Web. April 10. 2014.