Heinz von Foerster (né von Förster; November 13, 1911 – October 2, 2002) was an Austrian-American scientist combining physics and philosophy, and widely attributed as the originator of second-order cybernetics. He was twice a Guggenheim fellow (1956–57 and 1963–64) and also was a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1980. He is well known for his 1960 Doomsday equation formula published in Science predicting future population growth.[1]
Heinz von Foerster | |
---|---|
Born | Heinz von Förster November 13, 1911 Vienna, Austria-Hungary |
Died | October 2, 2002 (aged 90) Pescadero, California, U.S. |
Nationality | Austria United States |
Alma mater | Technical University of Vienna University of Breslau |
Known for | Von Foerster equation Second-order cybernetics Computer science Artificial intelligence Epistemology Biophysics |
Awards | Wiener Gold Medal (1983) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Cybernetics Physics Philosophy |
Institutions | University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign |
As a polymath, he wrote nearly two hundred professional papers, gaining renown in fields ranging from computer science and artificial intelligence to epistemology, and researched high-speed electronics and electro-optics switching devices as a physicist, and in biophysics, the study of memory and knowledge. He worked on cognition based on neurophysiology, mathematics, and philosophy and was called "one of the most consequential thinkers in the history of cybernetics".[2] He came to the United States, and stayed after meeting with Warren Sturgis McCulloch, where he received funding from The Pentagon to establish the Biological Computer Laboratory, which built the first parallel computer, the Numa-Rete.[3] Working with William Ross Ashby, one of the original Ratio Club members, and together with Warren McCulloch, Norbert Wiener, John von Neumann and Lawrence J. Fogel, Heinz von Foerster was an architect of cybernetics and one of the members of the Macy conferences,[4] eventually becoming editor of its early proceedings alongside Hans-Lukas Teuber and Margaret Mead.[5]
Biography
editVon Foerster was born in 1911 in Vienna, Austria-Hungary, as Heinz von Förster. His paternal grandfather was the Austrian architect Emil von Förster . His maternal grandmother was Marie Lang, an Austrian feminist, theosophist, and publisher. He studied physics at the Technical University of Vienna and at the University of Breslau, where in 1944 he received a PhD in physics. His relatives included Ludwig Wittgenstein, Erwin Lang and Hugo von Hofmannsthal. Ludwig Förster was his great-grandfather.[6] His Jewish roots did not cause him much trouble while he worked in radar laboratories during the Nazi era, as "he hid his ancestry with the help of an employer who chose not to press him for documents on his family."[7]
He moved to the US in 1949 and worked at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, where he was a professor of electrical engineering from 1951 to 1975. He was also professor of biophysics (1962–1975) and director of the Biological Computer Laboratory (1958–1975). Additionally, in 1956–57 and 1963–64, he was a Guggenheim Fellow and also President of the Wenner-Gren-Foundation for anthropological research from 1963 to 1965.[4]
He knew well and was in conversation with John von Neumann, Norbert Wiener, Humberto Maturana, Francisco Varela, Gordon Pask, Gregory Bateson, Lawrence J. Fogel and Margaret Mead, among many others. He influenced generations of students as a teacher and an inclusive, enthusiastic collaborator.
He died on October 2, 2002, in Pescadero, California.
Work
editVon Foerster was influenced by the Vienna Circle and Ludwig Wittgenstein. He worked in the field of cybernetics and is known as the inventor of second-order cybernetics.[2] He made important contributions to constructivism.[8] He is also known for his interest in computer music and magic.
The electron tube laboratory
editIn 1949, von Foerster started work at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign at the electron tube laboratory of the Electrical Engineering Department, where he succeeded Joseph Tykociński-Tykociner. With his students he developed many innovative devices, including ultra-high-frequency electronics[9]
He also worked on mathematical models of population dynamics and in 1959 published a model now called the "von Foerster equation", which is derivable from the principles of constant aging and conservation of mass.
where: n = n(t,a), t stands for time and a for age. m(a) is the death in function of the population age; n(t,a) is the population density in function of age.
When m(a) = 0, we have:[10]
It relates that a population ages, and that fact is the only one that influences change in population density.[11]
It is therefore a continuity equation; it can be solved using the method of characteristics.[10] Another way is by similarity solution; and a third is a numerical approach such as finite differences.
The gross birth rate is given by the following boundary condition:
The solution is only unique given the initial conditions
which states that the initial population distribution must be given; then it will evolve according to the partial differential equation.
Biological Computer Laboratory
editIn 1958, he formed the Biological Computer Lab, studying similarities in cybernetic systems in biology and electronics.[12]
Macy conferences
editHe was the youngest member of the core group of the Macy conferences on Cybernetics and editor of the five volumes of Cybernetics (1949–1953), a series of conference transcripts that represent important foundational conversations in the field. It was von Foerster who suggested that Wiener's coinage "Cybernetics" be applied to this conference series, which had previously been called "Circular Causal and Feedback Mechanisms in Biological and Social Systems".
Doomsday equation
editA 1960 issue of Science magazine included an article by von Foerster and his colleagues P. M. Mora and L. W. Amiot proposing a formula representing a best fit to available historical data on world population; the authors then predicted future population growth on the basis of this formula.[13] The formula gave 2.7 billion as the 1960 world population and predicted that population growth would become infinite by Friday, November 13, 2026 – von Foerster's 115th birthday anniversary – a prediction that earned it the name "the Doomsday Equation."
Based on population data obtained from various sources, von Foerster and his students concluded that world population growth over the centuries was faster than an exponential. In such a situation, doubling-time decreases over time. Von Foerster's tongue-in-cheek prediction of Doomsday on November 13, 2026, was based on an extrapolation into the future of doubling-time, with the finding that doubling-time would decrease to zero on that date.
Responders to his Doomsday prediction objected on the grounds of the finite human gestation time of 9 months, and the transparent fact that biological systems rarely persist in exponential growth for any substantial length of time. Those who knew von Foerster could see in his rejoinders an evident sense of humor.
See also
edit- Logarithmic timeline
- Macy conferences
- Power law: The equation that he derived for the date calculated is one that nowadays is called a power law.[citation needed]
- List of dates predicted for apocalyptic events
- The Dream of Reality by Lynn Segal, 1986. A book summarizing von Foerster's constructivist epistemology.
- Malthusian growth model
- Jakob von Uexküll
Publications
editVon Foerster authored more than 100 publications.[14] Books, a selection:
- 1949, Cybernetics: Transactions of the Sixth Conference, (editor), Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation: New York, 220 pp.
- 2002, Understanding understanding, a volume of von Foerster's papers, published by Springer-Verlag, 2002.
- 2010, with Monika Broecker: Part of the World. Fractals of Ethics – A Drama in Three Acts. Heinz von Foerster's most extensive biography. First published in German in 2002: with Monika Broecker. Teil der Welt. Fraktale einer Ethik – ein Drama in drei Akten.
Articles, a selection:
- 1958, "Basic Concepts of Homeostasis." In: Homeostatic Mechanisms, Upton, New York, pp. 216–242, 1958.
- 1960, "Doomsday: Friday, November 13, AD 2026," with P. M. Mora und L. W. Amiot, Science 132, pp. 1291–1295, 1960.
- 1961, "A Predictive Model for Self-Organizing Systems," Part I: Cybernetica 3, pp. 258–300; Part II: Cybernetica 4, pp. 20–55, with Gordon Pask, 1961.
- 1964, "Biological Computers," with W. Ross Ashby, In: Bioastronautics, K. E. Schaefer, Macmillan Co., New York, pp. 333– 360, 1964.
- 1969, "What is Memory that it may have Hindsight and Foresight"
- 1971, "Computing in the Semantic Domain"
- 1971, "Technology. What Will It Mean to Librarians?"
References
edit- ^ Heinz von Foerster, P. M. Mora and L. W. Amiot (November 1960). "Doomsday: Friday, 13 November, A.D. 2026. At this date human population will approach infinity if it grows as it has grown in the last two millennia". Science. 132 (3436): 1291–1295. Bibcode:1960Sci...132.1291V. doi:10.1126/science.132.3436.1291. PMID 13782058.
- ^ a b Foerster, Heinz V; Müller, Albert; Müller, Karl H.; Rooks, Elinor; Kasenbacher, Michael (2013). The Beginning of Heaven and Earth Has No Name: Seven Days with Second-Order Cybernetics. Fordham University Press. ISBN 978-0823255610.
- ^ Jamie Hutchinson. Von Foerster made Illinois a cybernetics "nerve center" Archived 2016-02-15 at the Wayback Machine Ingenuity newsletter, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, May 2004
- ^ a b "The Heinz von Foerster Page". Archived from the original on 2004-08-03. Retrieved 2004-08-20.
- ^ Biography of Heinz von Foerster 2002
- ^ Markoff, John (November 9, 2002), "Heinz von Foerster, a Leading Information Theorist, Dies at 90", The New York Times
- ^ John Markoff, "Heinz von Foerster, 90, Dies; Was Information Theorist", November 9, 2002, The New York Times
- ^ Segal, L. The Dream of Reality: Heinz Von Foerster's Constructivism, Springer, 2001. ISBN 0-387-95130-X
- ^ See for example, in Review of Scientific Instruments 25: 640–653, 1954.
- ^ a b Murray, J.D. Mathematical Biology: An Introduction. Third edition. Interdisciplinary Applied Mathematics. Mathematical Biology. Spring: 2002.
- ^ "Some Remarks on Changing Populations" in The Kinetics of Cellular Proliferation, F. Stohlman, Jr., ed., Grune & Stratton, New York, pp. 382–407 (1959); E. Trucco, Bulletin of Mathematical Biophysics 27: 285–304 and 449–471, 1965
- ^ "Biological Computer Laboratory". Archived from the original on 2007-05-10. Retrieved 2007-07-02.
- ^ Heinz von Foerster, P. M. Mora and L. W. Amiot (November 1960). "Doomsday: Friday, 13 November, A.D. 2026. At this date human population will approach infinity if it grows as it has grown in the last two millennia". Science. 132 (3436): 1291–1295. Bibcode:1960Sci...132.1291V. doi:10.1126/science.132.3436.1291. PMID 13782058.
- ^ The Bibliography of Heinz von Foerster 1943–2003, from Alexander Riegler, dec 2003 gives an overview of all his publications.
Further reading
edit- Asaro, Peter M. (2007). "Heinz von Foerster and the Bio-Computing Movements of the 1960s," Archived 2011-07-25 at the Wayback Machine in Albert Müller and Karl H. Müller (eds.) An Unfinished Revolution? Heinz von Foerster and the Biological Computer Laboratory | BCL 1958–1976. Vienna, Austria: Edition Echoraum.
External links
edit- Humanities Review Interview Archived 2014-05-27 at the Wayback Machine at Stanford University
- The Heinz von Foerster Page
- Biological Computer Laboratory web site, University of Illinois
- An anthology of Circularity Principles from the Heinz von Foerster entry at The Cybernetics Society
- Gooch, Sherwin, & Nordin, Hud, "High Tech Heroes television interview, episode 10, part 1," Heinz von Foerster discusses the founding of Cybernetics, and the possibility of achieving immortality through prosthetic brains, Foothill College, California, August 22, 1989. on YouTube
- "High Tech Heroes, episode 10, part 2." on YouTube
- "Heinz Von Foerster Papers at the University of Illinois Archives"