Between Human and Machine: Feedback, Control, and Computing Before Cybernetics

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JHU Press, 2002 - Computers - 439 pages

Today, we associate the relationship between feedback, control, and computing with Norbert Wiener's 1948 formulation of cybernetics. But the theoretical and practical foundations for cybernetics, control engineering, and digital computing were laid earlier, between the two world wars. In Between Human and Machine: Feedback, Control, and Computing before Cybernetics, David A. Mindell shows how the modern sciences of systems emerged from disparate engineering cultures and their convergence during World War II.

Mindell examines four different arenas of control systems research in the United States between the world wars: naval fire control, the Sperry Gyroscope Company, the Bell Telephone Laboratories, and Vannevar Bush's laboratory at MIT. Each of these institutional sites had unique technical problems, organizational imperatives, and working environments, and each fostered a distinct engineering culture. Each also developed technologies to represent the world in a machine.

At the beginning of World War II, President Roosevelt established the National Defense Research Committee, one division of which was devoted to control systems. Mindell shows how the NDRC brought together representatives from the four pre-war engineering cultures, and how its projects synthesized conceptions of control, communications, and computing. By the time Wiener articulated his vision, these ideas were already suffusing through engineering. They would profoundly influence the digital world.

As a new way to conceptualize the history of computing, this book will be of great interest to historians of science, technology, and culture, as well as computer scientists and theorists. Between Human and Machine: Feedback, Control, and Computing before Cybernetics

 

Contents

A History of Control Systems
1
The Bureau of Ordnance and the Ford Instrument Company
19
The Sperry Company
69
Bell Labs and the Transmission of Signals
105
Analog Computing at MIT
138
The Four Horsemen and Palomar
175
The Fire Control Divisions of the NDRC
185
8 The Servomechanisms Laboratory and Fire Control for the Masses
207
11 Cybernetics and Ideas of the Digital
276
Feedback and Information in 1945
307
Algorithm of the Ford Rangekeeper Mark 1
323
NDRC Section D2 and Division 7 Contracts for Fire Control
327
Algorithm of Bell Labs T10 Director
336
Notes
339
Bibliography
393
Index
417

9 Analogs Finest Hour
231
10 Radar and System Integration at the Radiation Laboratory
260

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About the author (2002)

David A. Mindell is Dibner Professor of the History of Engineering and Manufacturing and Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is author or editor of several books, including Digital Apollo: Human and Machine in Spaceflight and Between Human and Machine: Feedback, Control, and Computing before Cybernetics, the latter published by Johns Hopkins. The first edition of Iron Coffin, titled War, Technology, and Experience aboard the USS Monitor, won the Sally Hacker Prize from the Society for the History of Technology in 2001.

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