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I agree with this sentiment. "Dark Hero of the Information Age" https://www.amazon.com/Dark-Hero-Information-Age-Cybernetics... lays out how both Weiner and Shannon created information theory independently but Weiner took it further; incorporating feedback as a way of lowering the entropy and helping lay the path for today's ML revolution. The book goes on to lay out how Weiner's growing popularity in the Soviet Union and socialist views (he feared automation leading to unemployment) led to the blacklisting of his contributions within the academic community. Its no wander that the first trained Deep (more than three layers) Neural network with published in a Soviet Cybernetics journal in 1970.


TIL. I've always wondered why Weiner is not a geek hero like Feynman and Turing.

What I've always admired about Weiner is precisely his sensitivity to the social ramifications of his work and area of research. Rare bird, indeed.

(p.s. thanks for book ref.)


You may enjoy one of his books, "The Human Use of Human Beings" https://monoskop.org/images/5/51/Wiener_Norbert_The_Human_Us...




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