University of Chicago Press
The Cybernetic Brain
About this book
The Cybernetic Brain explores a largely forgotten group of British thinkers, including Grey Walter, Ross Ashby, Gregory Bateson, R. D. Laing, Stafford Beer, and Gordon Pask, and their singular work in a dazzling array of fields. Psychiatry, engineering, management, politics, music, architecture, education, tantric yoga, the Beats, and the sixties counterculture all come into play as Pickering follows the history of cybernetics’ impact on the world, from contemporary robotics and complexity theory to the Chilean economy under Salvador Allende. What underpins this fascinating history, Pickering contends, is a shared but unconventional vision of the world as ultimately unknowable, a place where genuine novelty is always emerging. And thus, Pickering avers, the history of cybernetics provides us with an imaginative model of open-ended experimentation in stark opposition to the modern urge to achieve domination over nature and each other.
Author / Editor information
Reviews
"The Cybernetic Brain is a rich, ambitious, and highly original work—and a gently hopeful one. Pickering has really written two books in one. The first is a history of the work of several key British cyberneticians and its impact on subsequent scientific and cultural debates. The second is a quietly passionate critique of modernist ways of knowing and being and a plea for the reintroduction of the sorts of practice-based, adaptable, techno-social modes common to cybernetic inquiry. Pickering weaves the analysis and the advocacy together across the book, and his vision of what a non-modern world might look like—or in fact, has looked like—is novel and compelling and will substantially extend our understanding of contemporary technoculture."
"What a lovely book this is—it tells a great story from the history of cybernetics and at the same time examines in innovative ways the complex ontological work they were doing. Pickering shows how 'ontology' is integrally about machines, materiality and philosophy—developing what I would call a theory of exploratory ontology."
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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CONTENTS
vii -
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Acknowledgments
ix -
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1. The Adaptive Brain
1 -
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2. Ontological Theater
17 - PART 1 : PSYCHIATRY TO CYBERNETICS
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3. Grey Walter: From Electroshock to the Psychedelic Sixties
37 -
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4. Ross Ashby: Psychiatry, Synthetic Brains, and Cybernetics
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5. Gregory Bateson and R. D. Laing: Symmetry, Psychiatry, and the Sixties
171 - PART 2 : BEYOND THE BRAIN
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6. Stafford Beer: From the Cybernetic Factory to Tantric Yoga
215 -
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7. Gordon Pask: From Chemical Computers to Adaptive Archictecture
309 -
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8. Sketches of Another Future
379 -
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Notes
403 -
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References
479 -
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Index
503