WIENER, NORBERT

WIENER, NORBERT
WIENER, NORBERT (1894–1964), U.S. mathematician; inventor of the science of cybernetics. Born in Columbia, Missouri, Wiener was a child prodigy. He was the son of leo wiener , historian of Yiddish language, literature, and folklore and professor of Slavic languages, who made incessant intellectual demands on his son (and who did not reveal their Jewishness – a fact discovered by Norbert Wiener only when he was in his teens). Wiener began to read scientific books at four, and by seven was familiar with the theories of natural scientists, such as Darwin, and with psychiatrists such as Charcot and Janet. He entered Tufts University at 11, and obtained his Ph.D. at Harvard University at 18. At Cambridge, England, he studied under such world-famous personalities as the philosopher Bertrand Russell and the mathematician G.H. Hardy. Wiener's main innovation as a mathematician was to develop a mathematics based upon imprecise terms reflecting the irregularities of the physical world. He sought to reduce these random movements to a minimum in order to bring them into harmony. During World War II, he applied his concepts to work connected with antiaircraft defense, and this led to advances in radar, high-speed electric computation, the automatic factory, and a new science he created called cybernetics, a word he coined from the Greek word for "steersman," meaning the study of control. This followed his attempt as a mathematician to find the basis of the communication of information, and of the control of a system based on such communication. Wiener suggested the use of cybernetics in diagnostic procedures and indicated the similarity between certain types of nervous pathology and servomechanism (goal-directed machines such as guns which correct their own fixing malfunctioning). His book Cybernetics (1948) was a scientific bestseller and transformed him into a public figure as the pioneer of computer development. For the last 17 years of his life he refused to take part in any military research. His book The Human Use of Human Beings (1950) sought to alert the layman to the dangerous social consequences of his theories. He wrote an autobiography in two parts: Ex-Prodigy (1953) and I Am a Mathematician (1956). (Maurice Goldsmith)

Encyclopedia Judaica. 1971.

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  • Wiener, Norbert — born Nov. 26, 1894, Columbia, Mo., U.S. died March 18, 1964, Stockholm, Swed. U.S. mathematician. He earned a Ph.D. from Harvard at 18. He joined the faculty of MIT in 1919. His work on generalized harmonic analysis and Tauberian theorems (which… …   Universalium

  • Wiener , Norbert — (1894–1964) American mathematician Born in Columbia, Missouri, Wiener was a child prodigy in mathematics who sustained his early promise to become a mathematician of great originality and creativity. He is probably one of the most outstanding… …   Scientists

  • Wiener, Norbert — ► (1894 1964) Matemático estadounidense que, junto con el cardiólogo A. Rosenblueth, creó y definió la cibernética. En 1948 publicó la obra La cibernética, o el control y la comunicación en el animal y la máquina, en la que expone los principios… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Wiener,Norbert — Wie·ner (wēʹnər), Norbert. 1894 1964. American mathematician who founded the field of cybernetics. * * * …   Universalium

  • Wiener, Norbert — (1894 1964)    American mathematician. Born in Columbia, Missouri, he was the son of Leo Wiener, a professor of Slavic studies at Harvard. He studied at Tufts and later at Harvard. He taught at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His works… …   Dictionary of Jewish Biography

  • Wiener, Norbert — ● /vie nair/ np. m. ►PERS (26/11/1894 18/03/1964). Mathématicien étasunien, diplômé de Harvard. Ce fut l un des fondateurs américains de l informatique moderne (i.e. après les systèmes purement mécaniques comme la machine de Babbage, Charles),… …   Dictionnaire d'informatique francophone

  • Wiener, Norbert —  (1894–1964) American mathematician, developed the science of cybernetics …   Bryson’s dictionary for writers and editors

  • Norbert Wiener — Born November 26, 1894(1894 11 26) Columbia, Missouri, U.S …   Wikipedia

  • Norbert Weiner — Norbert Wiener (* 26. November 1894 in Columbia, Missouri; † 18. März 1964 in Stockholm) war ein amerikanischer Mathematiker. Er ist als Begründer der Kybernetik bekannt, ein Ausdruck, den er in seinem Werk Cybernetics or Control and… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Norbert Wiener — (* 26. November 1894 in Columbia, Missouri; † 18. März 1964 in Stockholm) war ein US amerikanischer Mathematiker. Er ist als Begründer der Kybernetik bekannt, ein Ausdruck, den er in seinem Werk Cybernetics or Control and Communication in the… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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