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  1. This is the story of a man who has fallen through the cracks in the information age and his fight for human beings that is the stuff of legend. Born on the doorstep of the twentieth century, Norbert Wiener was a descendant of Eastern European rabbis, scholars, and, purportedly, of the medieval Jewish philosopher Moses Maimonides.

  2. Norbert Wiener married, and perhaps remembering his treatment by his father, he was known as a devoted parent to his two daughters. In March 1964, Wiener died unexpectedly while giving a lecture ...

  3. May 18, 2018 · WIENER, NORBERT. ( b. Columbia, Missouri, 26 November 1894; d. Stockholm, Sweden, 18 March 1964. mathematics. Wiener was the son of Leo Wiener, who was born in Byelostok, Russia, and Bertha Kahn. Although a child prodigy, he matured into a renowned mathematician rather slowly. At first he was taught by his father.

  4. Book. The Human Use of Human Beings is a book by Norbert Wiener, the founding thinker of cybernetics theory and an influential advocate of automation; it was first published in 1950 and revised in 1954. The text argues for the benefits of automation to society; it analyzes the meaning of productive communication and discusses ways for humans ...

  5. Nov 26, 2020 · Norbert Wiener (1894-1964) On November 26, 1894, American mathematician Norbert Wiener was born. Wiener established the science of cybernetics, a term he coined, which is concerned with the common factors of control and communication in living organisms, automatic machines, and organizations. He attained international renown by formulating some ...

  6. Cybernetics is characterized by a tendency to universalize the notion of feedback, seeing it as the underlying principle of the technological world. Closely related variants include: information theory, human factors engineering, control theory, systems theory. Norbert Wiener founded the field with his in his 1948 book Cybernetics: or Control ...

  7. First edition. Cybernetics: Or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine is a book written by Norbert Wiener and published in 1948. [1] It is the first public usage of the term "cybernetics" to refer to self-regulating mechanisms. The book laid the theoretical foundation for servomechanisms (whether electrical, mechanical or ...

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