Around 30 years before Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web, McLuhan wrote about a “global village” brought together by technology, with equal access to information for all. In other words, the internet.
McLuhan was ridiculed by many academics, but he is now widely acknowledged to have predicted the rise of the internet, including social media, Netflix and other everyday obsessions.
Google has designed a special Doodle to "honour the man whose prophetic vision of the ‘computer as a research and communication instrument’ has undeniably become a reality."
Born Herbert Marshall McLuhan on July 21 1911, the Canadian studied for a Masters English at the University of Manitoba before enrolling at Cambridge.
After graduating with a PhD, McLuhan became a lecturer, and by the early 1950s was teaching at the University of Toronto.
McLuhan proposed that history could be broken down into distinct eras: the acoustic age, the literary age, the print age, and the then-emerging electronic age.
He wrote about a “global village” which would give equal access to information through technology, removing global barriers to knowledge.
“The next medium, whatever it is it may be the extension of consciousness — will include television as its content, not as its environment, and will transform television into an art form,” McLuhan explained.
In his follow-up, Understanding Media, McLuhan evolved his thesis to discuss how the means of communication rather than the information itself would become the most important element of the electronic age.
He coined the phrase “The Medium is the Message”, which he expanded upon in a 1967 book of the same name.
But his work proved controversial among academics throughout the 1970s, and after his death in 1980.
The invention of the World Wide Web in 1989 gratified McLuhan’s theories.
Today, billions of people have equal access to a wealth of knowledge, with the advent of smart phones transforming humanity's relationship with information
Credit:- http://www.express.co.uk
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