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http://dspace.utalca.cl/handle/1950/6344
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Title: | An introduction to cybernetics |
Authors: | Ashby, W. Ross |
Keywords: | Cibernetica |
Issue Date: | 1957 |
Publisher: | Chapman & Hall Ltd. |
Abstract: | Many workers in the biological sciences—physiologists,
psychologists, sociologists—are interested in cybernetics and
would like to apply its methods and techniques to their own speciality.
Many have, however, been prevented from taking up the
subject by an impression that its use must be preceded by a long
study of electronics and advanced pure mathematics; for they
have formed the impression that cybernetics and these subjects
are inseparable.
The author is convinced, however, that this impression is false.
The basic ideas of cybernetics can be treated without reference to
electronics, and they are fundamentally simple; so although
advanced techniques may be necessary for advanced applications,
a great deal can be done, especially in the biological sciences, by
the use of quite simple techniques, provided they are used with a
clear and deep understanding of the principles involved. It is the
author’s belief that if the subject is founded in the common-place
and well understood, and is then built up carefully, step by step,
there is no reason why the worker with only elementary mathematical
knowledge should not achieve a complete understanding
of its basic principles. With such an understanding he will then be
able to see exactly what further techniques he will have to learn if
he is to proceed further; and, what is particularly useful, he will be
able to see what techniques he can safely ignore as being irrelevant
to his purpose.
The book is intended to provide such an introduction. It starts
from common-place and well-understood concepts, and proceeds,
step by step, to show how these concepts can be made exact, and
how they can be developed until they lead into such subjects as
feedback, stability, regulation, ultrastability, information, coding,
noise, and other cybernetic topics. Throughout the book no
knowledge of mathematics is required beyond elementary algebra;
in particular, the arguments nowhere depend on the calculus
(the few references to it can be ignored without harm, for they are
intended only to show how the calculus joins on to the subjects
discussed, if it should be used). The illustrations and examples are
mostly taken from the biological, rather than the physical, sciences.
Its overlap with
Design for a Brain is
small, so that the two
books are almost independent. They are, however, intimately
related, and are best treated as complementary; each will help to
illuminate the other. |
Description: | 156 p. |
URI: | http://dspace.utalca.cl/handle/1950/6344 |
Appears in Collections: | Colección Ingeniería, Computación y Tecnología
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