McLuhan Quote

“The family circle has widened. The worldpool of information fathered by electric media -movies, Telstar, flight- far surpasses any possible influence mom and dad can now bring to bear. Character no longer is shaped by only two earnest, fumbling experts. Now all the world’s a sage.” (McLuhan 14)

As technology advances, there appears to be a greater gap between family members. Quite often you’ll see families sitting together at a restaurant, but everyone will be staring into their cellphones. They’re together physically, but each of them is busy checking their Facebook account, watching a Youtube video, or texting someone who isn’t even in the room. Another example is when individuals will use technology to quite literally do the job of parenting for them. Again at the restaurant, it’s very likely to see a couple with their child who is busy playing a game on a tablet or phone. The couple is so engrossed with themselves and what they’re doing that it’s almost as if they’ve forgotten their child is even at the table. Instead of receiving some much needed bonding time with their parents, children seem to be at risk of developing a substitute familial relationship with technology instead.

 

An Electric Circuit

McLuhan claims that our society is very similar to an electric circuit and I believe that may be true now more than ever. So many people on this planet have the opportunity to connect with one another through the advances that have been made in communication. In the distant past, people would rely upon handwritten letters that could take weeks, sometimes months, to reach another person. Today, people don’t need to even write to talk with someone far away, they can talk in real-time through a screen. We can visit with family without ever leaving the house and we can make friends with people from other countries whom we’ve never physically met. There can even be teams of people from across the country, maybe even internationally, all working together on a project who couldn’t have before in years past.