Born in Flushing, Queens, New York on October 19, 1895, Lewis Mumford was an American historian; sociologist, philosopher of technology and as well a mythical critic and he was a graduate of Stuyvesant High School class of 1912. Lewis attended City College of New York and The New School for Social Research but never obtain a degree due to a terrible lung disease, known as tuberculosis (Wikipedia, n.d.). He was predominantly known for his study of cities and urban architecture; he was inspired vividly by the work of Sir Patrick Geddes who hailed from Scotland. Lewis Mumford had a comprehensive and successful career in writing. His close associate was a British sociologist Victor Branford whom he worked with closely. The friends of Mumford were Clarence Stein, Frederic Osborn, Frank Lloyd Wright, Edmund N. Bacon, and Vannevar Bush. Although Mumford was also a fashionable man, but he was more enthusiastic about the American architecture and urban life which he interpreted in from a social context. Furthermore, Lewis Mumford wrote in his …show more content…
He also induced that, amongst the members of primitives’ societies, sharing of ideas and information was absolutely natural to early humanity, which happens to be the foundation of society as it developed and thrived to be more sophisticated and multifaceted. Another major concern of Mumford is the relationship between technics and bio-viability. Before the dawn of technology; the vast majority of the areas of the planet were bio-viable at a certain stage; however, the rapid advances in technology led to dramatic decrease in bio-viability. For instance, water poisoned, parking lots, slag heaps, and concrete cities are extremely limited in terms of their