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Panopticon - Wikipedia The panopticon is a design of institutional building with an inbuilt system of control, originated by the English philosopher and social theorist Jeremy Bentham in the 18th century The concept is to allow all prisoners of an institution to be observed by a single prison officer, without the inmates knowing whether or not they are being watched
Panopticon | Surveillance, Discipline, Control | Britannica Panopticon, architectural form for a prison, the drawings for which were published by Jeremy Bentham in 1791 It consisted of a circular, glass-roofed, tanklike structure with cells along the external wall facing toward a central rotunda; guards stationed in the rotunda could keep all the inmates
What is Panopticism? | Definition, Analysis, Examples The Panopticon was a prison designed by philosopher and social theorist Jeremy Bentham in a series of letters collectively entitled “ Panopticon, or the Inspection-House ” (1791), though the original idea came from his brother Samuel
Bentham’s Panopticon and the Birth of Surveillance - Brewminate Envisioned originally as a design for prisons, the Panopticon was more than a blueprint for incarceration It was a philosophical statement, a psychological weapon, and a prescient model of what would later be understood as a mechanism of modern surveillance
Philosophy of Surveillance: Foucaults Panopticon English philosopher, jurist, and social reformer Founder of modern utilitarianism "It is the greatest happiness of the greatest number that is the measure of right and wrong " "At the end of the 1700s, people dreamed of a society without crime And then the dream evaporated
The Panopticon: Jeremy Bentham’s Vision of Surveillance and . . . Jeremy Bentham, an English philosopher and social theorist, introduced the concept of the Panopticon in the late 1700s Initially designed as a model prison, the Panopticon aimed to facilitate efficient surveillance with minimal resources