Stefano Franchi, Güven Güzeldere and Erich Minch
Seeks to promote an understanding of a multidisciplinary approach to artificial intelligence and the humanities.
Abstract
Purpose
Seeks to promote an understanding of a multidisciplinary approach to artificial intelligence and the humanities.
Design/methodology/approach
This paper is based on an interview with Heinz von Foerster.
Findings
Describes von Foerster's personal and intellectual journey which made him a transdisciplinary scientist and the founder and director of the Biological Computer Laboratory.
Originality/value
Provides a better understanding in how the complexity of scientific practice should be reflected in an open and flexible attitude towards the objects of enquiry.
Details
Keywords
This paper explores the history of Stafford Beer's work in management cybernetics, from his early conception and simulation of an adaptive automatic factory and associated…
Abstract
This paper explores the history of Stafford Beer's work in management cybernetics, from his early conception and simulation of an adaptive automatic factory and associated experimentation in biological computing, through the development of the Viable System Model and the Team Syntegrity technique for discussion and planning. It also pursues Beer into the fields of micro‐ and macropolitics and spirituality. The aim is to show that all of Beer's projects can be understood as specific instantiations and workings out of a cybernetic ontology of unknowability and becoming: a stance that recognises that the world can always surprise us and that we can never dominate it through knowledge. The thrust of Beer's work was, thus, to construct systems that could adapt performatively to environments they could not fully control.