Who Will Be the Modern-Day Copernicus?

In 1439, German blacksmith Johannes Gutenberg introduced the movable type to Europe that enabled mass communication at heretofore unprecedented scale, helping usher in the Early Modern Age. Among the early beneficiaries of the novel printing press was a young student, Nicolaus Copernicus, who amassed a sizable library of astronomy books in Kraków during the late 15th century. His synthesis of the newly liberated information resulted in the publication of Dē revolutionibus orbium coelestium, which transformed a convoluted, geocentric model of planetary motion into the elegant heliocentric model that we have today. Indeed, the conceptual reframing of extant, seemingly abstruse data to explain the revolution of celestial bodies was so radical that the word revolution became synonymous with the now-familiar notion of overthrowing the established system. Dominoes have been falling ever since: the French, American, and Industrial Revolutions, etc.

We are now a quarter century since the Internet was introduced to the world. As profound as the information revolution precipitated by the printing press was, it pales in comparison to the Internet’s knowledge liberation.

Who, then, will be the Copernicus of our time?

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