The invention of an algebraic system of logic by George Boole in 1847, which forms the basis of all modern digital computers. At the time it appeared to have no practical uses.
Approximately seventy years after Boole's death, Claude Shannon attended a philosophy class at the University of Michigan which introduced him to Boole's studies. Then in 1937 Shannon wrote a master's thesis at MIT, in which he showed how Boolean algebra could optimize the design of systems of electromechanical relays (telephone exchanges), and that circuits with relays could solve Boolean algebra problems.
Victor Shestakov at Moscow State University proposed a theory of electric switches based on Boolean logic earlier than Claude Shannon in 1935 but the first publication of Shestakov's result took place only in 1941.
