Despite his scientific brilliance and many practical contributions to engineering, Norbert Wiener had a reputation as the archetypal absent-minded professor who left something to be desired as a lecturer. Oh, well, you can't have everything.
1894: Norbert Wiener is born in Columbia, Missouri. A child prodigy, he goes on to become one of the 20th century's most famous mathematicians and the founder of the discipline of cybernetics, the study of self-regulating systems.
Norbert Wiener, a mathematician, wrote Cybernetics.
The synonym(s) of author's purpose is/are "maybe": author's goal, author's accomplishment and purpose of an author.
Books are by an author, from a publisher.
affiliation of the author means to what institution is related to the author
The author was Homer.
the author is not real
Leonas Kacinskas has written: 'Cybernetics in the USSR' -- subject(s): Cybernetics
E. K. Warriar has written: 'An introduction to economic cybernetics' -- subject(s): Cybernetics, Operations research
Cybernetics Society was created in 1968.
Media Cybernetics was created in 1981.
Cybernetics Guardian was created in 1989.
Rory Martin has written: 'Optimal control of drug administration in cancer chemotherapy' -- subject(s): Administration, Antineoplastic agents, Biological Models, Cancer, Chemotherapy, Drug Administration Schedule, Drug Resistance, Drug therapy, Mathematical models, Mathematics, Neoplasms, cybernetics, biological cybernetics, biomedical cybernetics, medical cybernetics, systems medicine
W. R. Ashby has written: 'An introduction to cybernetics'
Roberto Cordeschi has written: 'The discovery of the artificial' -- subject(s): Cybernetics
American Society for Cybernetics was created in 1964.
Charles Richard Dechert has written: 'Ente nazionale idrocarburi' -- subject(s): Ente nazionale idrocarburi 'The social impact of cybernetics' -- subject(s): Science and civilization, Cybernetics
Horst Bannach has written: 'Der geregelte Mensch' -- subject(s): Cybernetics
Andoni Alonso has written: 'Carta al Homo Ciberneticus / Letters to Homo Cybernetics'