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  1. Norbert Wiener (26 tháng 11 năm 1894 - 18 tháng 3 năm 1964) là một nhà toán học và triết học Mỹ . Ông là Giáo sư Toán học tại MIT . Được biết đến như một thần đồng nổi tiếng, Wiener sau này trở thành một nhà nghiên cứu đầu tiên quá trình ngẫu nhiên và nhiễu, lĩnh vực liên ...

  2. 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 ...

  3. Norbert Wiener (26. listopadu 1894 – 18. března 1964) byl americký matematik a filozof, který je považován za zakladatele kybernetiky. Toto slovo použil ve své knize Kybernetika aneb Řízení a sdělování u organismů a strojů .

  4. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Marchl 18—Dr. Norbert Wiener, worldrenowned scientist who was considered to be the father ofi automation, died today in Stockholm, it was announced by the Massachusetts ...

  5. 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 ...

  6. About this book. This book presents the entire body of thought of Norbert Wiener (1894–1964), knowledge of which is essential if one wishes to understand and correctly interpret the age in which we live. The focus is in particular on the philosophical and sociological aspects of Wiener’s thought, but these aspects are carefully framed ...

  7. This is a seminal work by Norbert Wiener,genius mathematician, who was a child prodigy who recieved his PhD from Harvard at 18, then denied a faculty postion because he was Jewish in 1936. He was a generalist, however, having first studied Zoology and philosophy; later psychology.

    • Norbert Wiener
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