The Cybernetics Group
This is the engaging story of a moment of transformation in the human
sciences, a detailed account of a remarkable group of people who met
regularly from 1946 to 1953 to explore the possibility of using
scientific ideas that had emerged in the war years (cybernetics,
information theory, computer theory) as a basis for interdisciplinary
alliances. The Macy Conferences on Cybernetics, as they came to be
called, included such luminaries as Norbert Wiener, John von Neumann,
Margaret Mead, Gregory Bateson, Warren McCulloch, Walter Pitts, Kurt
Lewin, F. S. C. Northrop, Molly Harrower, and Lawrence Kubie, who
thought and argued together about such topics as insanity, vision,
circular causality, language, the brain as a digital machine, and how to
make wise decisions. Heims, who met and talked with many of
the participants, portrays them not only as thinkers but as human
beings. His account examines how the conduct and content of research are
shaped by the society in which it occurs and how the spirit of the
times, in this case a mixture of postwar confidence and cold-war
paranoia, affected the thinking of the cybernetics group. He uses the
meetings to explore the strong influence elite groups can have in
establishing connections and agendas for research and provides a
firsthand took at the emergence of paradigms that were to become central
to the new fields of artificial intelligence and cognitive science.
In his joint biography of John von Neumann and Norbert Wiener, Heims
offered a challenging interpretation of the development of recent
American science and technology. Here, in this group portrait of an
important generation of American intellectuals, Heims extends that
interpretation to a broader canvas, in the process paying special
attention to the two iconoclastic figures, Warren McCulloch and Gregory
Bateson, whose ideas on the nature of the mind/brain and on holism are
enjoying renewal today.
physical copy
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