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    Instead of the evolution towards a global village of simultaneous social action and unified consciousness that <no>McLuhan</no> spoke of in the 1960s, during the 1970s he began to see new technologies of ultra-rapid communication as giving impetus to greater acceleration with paradoxical effects and detrimental consequences. In his last posthumously published book The Global Village, he announced that we are no longer living in a community of speed, but at the 'beginning of a speed of light society.' As technology penetrates the human and social body more deeply, <no>McLuhan</no> warned that we were not designed to live at the speed of light. The later <no>McLuhan</no> began to rethink his earlier technotopian views of computing in order to observe the satisfactions and dissatisfactions, positive and negative results, of living in a 'speed of light society.'