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  1. Donald MacCrimmon MacKay (9 August 1922 – 6 February 1987) was a British physicist, and professor at the Department of Communication and Neuroscience at Keele University in Staffordshire, England, known for his contributions to information theory and the theory of brain organisation.

  2. The collection also includes videotapes, audiotapes, and some transcripts (1968-1976) of lectures Teuber gave at MIT including a complete set of his introductory psychology (course 9.00) lectures.... Dates: 1946 - 1979. Found in: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Libraries. Department of Distinctive Collections.

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  4. The MacCrimmon of whom there is the most reliable information is Red Donald (Dòmhnull Ruadh) (d July 31, 1825). Red Donald held tacks at Borreraig and Shader, and at Trien in Waternish, and also a farm at Glenelg. Red Donald's older brother was Black John (Iain Dubh) (d 1822), who also held the Boreraig tack

  5. In this paper I present an overview of the life and work of Donald MacCrimmon Mackay, a distinguished Christian polymath who made significant contributions across a number of domains in science and philosophy in the middle part of the 20th Century, and the centenary of whose birth was in 2022.

    • Science and Christian Belief
    • English
    • 20
    • 83-102
  6. Donald MacCrimmon MacKay. Computers and Comprehension. 1964. Linguistic and non-linguistic "understanding" of linguistic tokens. 1964. About RAND Reports. Quality ...

  7. In this dissertation I present a critical analysis of some of the philosophical and theological ideas of Donald M. MacKay. (1922–1987). MacKay was a Scottish scientist who made significant contributions across a range of scientific fields (information theory, artificial intelligence, and neuroscience), as well as to the discipline of theology and science.

  8. Information, Mechanism and Meaning. Donald MacCrimmon MacKay. MIT Press, 1969 - Computers - 196 pages. A collection of selected papers written by the information theorist and "brain physicist," most of which were presented to various scientific conferences in the 1950s and 1960s. Most of this collection concerns MacKay's abiding preoccupation ...