Sunday, June 20, 2010

Somebody Had to Invent Spaces Between Words!

You would have thought of it, right?

SFChron reports:
Look closely at what you're reading right now. See those little spaces between the words? They may look unimportant, but the invention of word spaces, back in the Middle Ages, changed the course of culture.

For the first couple of thousand years after people began writing, they didn't bother separating one word from the next. Long lines of letters ran together across the length of the scroll or the page. Reading in those days was a trial. Your brain cranked away as you tried to decipher where one word ended and the next began. No one read silently. To decipher a word, you had to say it out loud.

When an anonymous scribe started putting spaces between words, around the year 800, everything changed. Reading became much easier, and you could do it silently. No longer taxed, your brain could devote itself to the interpretation of text. Deep, solitary reading was born, and with it, media historians like Walter Ong have argued, came a richer consciousness.

3 comments:

  1. Thank God he couldn't patent his invention orwewouldbeindeepdoodoo !

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  2. @ anonymous

    I knew that patent comment was coming. You'll have to wait for my book to find out how this problem should be resolved.

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  3. I suppose the invention of the zero is a comparable much ado from nothing.

    http://www.etymonline.com/zero.php

    ReplyDelete