To my mind, Marshall McLuhan was doing what many of us in Neil Postman's early NYU Media Ecology program were doing: Trying to create a new language and a new  structure  for describing the true impact of technology on human society and  human  psychology. One term that comes to mind is "paradigm switch." Through  puns,  probes and metaphors McLuhan attempted to define how electronic media  put  us into a post-print paradigm. One problem: when you're in one  paradigm, its  hard to see it. Terms like "reductionist," "technological  determinist" etc are  the ways other people try to describe in their own  paradigmatic terms what  McLuhan was attempting. They were  misinformed.
One reason I always bring up Claude Levi-Strauss (ad nauseam  to some  peoples minds) is that he also straddled paradigms. In an cultural  and  intellectual environment where it was easy to describe native peoples  as  "primitive" Levi-Strauss suggested that they were capable of a  sophistication of  thought and a nuance of expression through their  "mythology" equal to or perhaps  greater than our own. That doesn't mean  "right," just complex. In his analysis  of myths Levi-Strauss stumbled upon  a great realization. It was the not content  of the myths which contained  their true meaning. It was the structure of the  total mythic canon which  contained the "message."  McLuhan knew of  Levi-Strauss and admitted his  debt to him. (see James M. Curtis "Marshall  McLuhan and French  Structuralism" Boundary 2 1/1:134-46, 1970 and McLuhan's own  note in  Technology and Culture, Vol. 16, No. 1 (Jan., 1975),  74-78.)
"I don't  know who discovered water, but it wasn't a fish" McLuhan was  fond of  saying. He could have added that whoever did discover water was probably  labeled an H2O determinist or an "airhead" by the other water  dwellers.
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