'''Norbert Wiener''' (November 26, 1894, [[Columbia, Missouri]] – March 18, 1964, [[Stockholm]], [[Sweden]]) was an [[United States|American]] pure and [[applied math|applied]] [[mathematician]].
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'''Norbert Wiener''' (November 26, 1894, Columbia, Missouri – March 18, 1964, [[Stockholm]], [[Sweden]]) was an American [[mathematician]].
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A famous [[child prodigy]], Wiener went on to become a pioneer in the study of [[stochastic processes|stochastic]] and [[noise]] processes, contributing work relevant to [[electronic engineering]], [[electronic communication]], and [[control system]]s.
+
A famous [[child prodigy]], Wiener went on to become a pioneer in the study of [[stochastic processes|stochastic]] and [[noise]] processes, contributing work relevant to electronic engineering, electronic communication, and [[control system]]s.
−
Wiener is the founder of [[cybernetics]], a field that formalizes the notion of [[feedback]], with many implications for [[engineering]], [[systems control]], [[computer science]], [[biology]], [[philosophy]], and the organization of [[society]].
+
Wiener is the founder of [[cybernetics]], a field that formalizes the notion of [[feedback]], with many implications for engineering, [[systems control]], computer science, [[biology]], [[philosophy]], and the organization of [[society]].
==Biography==
==Biography==
===Youth===
===Youth===
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Wiener was the first child of [[Leo Wiener]] and Bertha Kahn, both [[Ashkenazi Jews]] of [[Poland|Polish]] and [[Germany|German]] descent, respectively. Employing teaching methods of his own invention, Leo educated Norbert at home until 1903, except for a brief interlude when Norbert was 7 years of age. Wiener became a [[child prodigy]] in part due to his father's tutelage. Earning his living teaching [[German language|German]] and [[Slavic languages]], Leo read widely and accumulated a personal library from which the young Norbert benefited greatly. Leo also had ample ability in mathematics, and tutored his son in the subject until he left home.
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Wiener was the first child of Leo Wiener and Bertha Kahn, both Ashkenazi Jews of Polish and German descent, respectively. Employing teaching methods of his own invention, Leo educated Norbert at home until 1903, except for a brief interlude when Norbert was 7 years of age. Wiener became a child prodigy in part due to his father's tutelage. Earning his living teaching German and Slavic languages, Leo read widely and accumulated a personal library from which the young Norbert benefited greatly. Leo also had ample ability in mathematics, and tutored his son in the subject until he left home.
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After graduating from [[Ayer High School]] in 1906 at 11 years of age, Wiener entered [[Tufts College]]. He was awarded a [[Bachelor of Arts|BA]] in mathematics in 1909 at the age of 14, whereupon he began graduate studies in [[zoology]] at [[Harvard]]. In 1910 he transferred to [[Cornell University|Cornell]] to study philosophy.
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After graduating from Ayer High School in 1906 at 11 years of age, Wiener entered Tufts College. He was awarded a [[Bachelor of Arts|BA]] in mathematics in 1909 at the age of 14, whereupon he began graduate studies in [[zoology]] at Harvard]]. In 1910 he transferred to Cornell to study philosophy.
===Harvard===
===Harvard===
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The next year he returned to Harvard, while still continuing his philosophical studies. Back at Harvard, Wiener came under the influence of [[Edward Vermilye Huntington]], whose mathematical interests ranged from axiomatic foundations to problems posed by engineering. Harvard awarded Wiener a [[Ph.D.]] in 1912, when he was a mere 18, for a dissertation on [[mathematical logic]], supervised by [[Karl Schmidt]], the essential results of which were published as Wiener (1914). In that dissertation, he was the first to see that the [[ordered pair]] can be defined in terms of elementary [[set theory]]. Hence [[relation (mathematics)|relations]] can be wholly grounded in [[set theory]], so that the theory of relations does not require any axioms or primitive notions distinct from those of set theory. In 1921, [[Kazimierz Kuratowski]] proposed a simplification of Wiener's definition of the ordered pair, and that simplification has been in common use ever since.
+
The next year he returned to Harvard, while still continuing his philosophical studies. Back at Harvard, Wiener came under the influence of Edward Vermilye Huntington, whose mathematical interests ranged from axiomatic foundations to problems posed by engineering. Harvard awarded Wiener a [[Ph.D.]] in 1912, when he was a mere 18, for a dissertation on [[mathematical logic]], supervised by [[Karl Schmidt]], the essential results of which were published as Wiener (1914). In that dissertation, he was the first to see that the [[ordered pair]] can be defined in terms of elementary [[set theory]]. Hence [[relation (mathematics)|relations]] can be wholly grounded in [[set theory]], so that the theory of relations does not require any axioms or primitive notions distinct from those of set theory. In 1921, [[Kazimierz Kuratowski]] proposed a simplification of Wiener's definition of the ordered pair, and that simplification has been in common use ever since.
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In 1914, Wiener traveled to Europe, to study under [[Bertrand Russell]] and [[G. H. Hardy]] at [[University of Cambridge|Cambridge University]], and under [[David Hilbert]] and [[Edmund Landau]] at the [[University of Göttingen]]. In 1915-16, he taught philosophy at Harvard, then worked for [[General Electric]] and wrote for the [[Encyclopedia Americana]]. When [[World War I]] broke out, [[Oswald Veblen]] invited him to work on [[ballistics]] at the [[Aberdeen Proving Ground]] in Maryland. Thus Wiener, an eventual pacifist, wore a uniform 1917-18. Living and working with other mathematicians strengthened and deepened his interest in mathematics.
+
In 1914, Wiener traveled to Europe, to study under [[Bertrand Russell]] and [[G. H. Hardy]] at [[University of Cambridge|Cambridge University]], and under [[David Hilbert]] and [[Edmund Landau]] at the [[University of Göttingen]]. In 1915-16, he taught philosophy at Harvard, then worked for [General Electric and wrote for the Encyclopedia Americana. When World War I broke out, Oswald Veblen invited him to work on ballistics at the Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland. Thus Wiener, an eventual pacifist, wore a uniform 1917-18. Living and working with other mathematicians strengthened and deepened his interest in mathematics.
===After the war===
===After the war===
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===During and after World War II===
===During and after World War II===
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During [[World War II]], his work on the automatic aiming and firing of [[anti-aircraft gun]]s led Wiener to [[communication theory]] and eventually to formulate [[cybernetics]]. After the war, his prominence helped MIT to recruit a research team in [[cognitive science]], made up of researchers in [[neuropsychology]] and the mathematics and [[biophysics]] of the nervous system, including [[Warren Sturgis McCulloch]] and [[Walter Pitts]]. These men went on to make pioneering contributions to [[computer science]] and [[artificial intelligence]]. Shortly after the group was formed, Wiener broke off all contact with its members. Speculation still flourishes as to why this split occurred.
+
During World War II, his work on the automatic aiming and firing of anti-aircraft guns led Wiener to [[communication theory]] and eventually to formulate [[cybernetics]]. After the war, his prominence helped MIT to recruit a research team in [[cognitive science]], made up of researchers in [[neuropsychology]] and the mathematics and [[biophysics]] of the nervous system, including [[Warren Sturgis McCulloch]] and [[Walter Pitts]]. These men went on to make pioneering contributions to [[computer science]] and [[artificial intelligence]]. Shortly after the group was formed, Wiener broke off all contact with its members. Speculation still flourishes as to why this split occurred.
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Wiener went on to break new ground in cybernetics, [[robotics]], computer control, and [[automation]]. He shared his theories and findings with other researchers, and credited the contributions of others. These included [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] researchers and their findings. Wiener's connections with them placed him under suspicion during the [[Cold War]]. He was a strong advocate of automation to improve the standard of living, and to overcome economic underdevelopment. His ideas became influential in [[India]], whose government he advised during the 1950s.
+
Wiener went on to break new ground in cybernetics, [[robotics]], computer control, and [[automation]]. He shared his theories and findings with other researchers, and credited the contributions of others. These included [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] researchers and their findings. Wiener's connections with them placed him under suspicion during the Cold War. He was a strong advocate of automation to improve the standard of living, and to overcome economic underdevelopment. His ideas became influential in India, whose government he advised during the 1950s.
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Wiener declined an invitation to join the [[Manhattan Project]]. After the war, he became increasingly concerned with what he saw as political interference in scientific research, and the militarization of science. His article "A Scientist Rebels" in the January 1947 issue of ''[[The Atlantic Monthly]]'' urged scientists to consider the ethical implications of their work. After the war, he refused to accept any government funding or to work on military projects. The way Wiener's stance towards nuclear weapons and the Cold War contrasted with that of [[John von Neumann]] is the central theme of ``John Von Neumann and Norbert Wiener
+
Wiener declined an invitation to join the Manhattan Project. After the war, he became increasingly concerned with what he saw as political interference in scientific research, and the militarization of science. His article "A Scientist Rebels" in the January 1947 issue of ''The Atlantic Monthly'' urged scientists to consider the ethical implications of their work. After the war, he refused to accept any government funding or to work on military projects. The way Wiener's stance towards nuclear weapons and the Cold War contrasted with that of [[John von Neumann]] is the central theme of ``John Von Neumann and Norbert Wiener
" Heims (1980).
" Heims (1980).
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===Awards and honors===
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* Wiener won the [[Bôcher Prize]] in 1933 and the [[National Medal of Science]] in 1963 (Presented by President Johnson at a White House Ceremony in January 1964.), shortly before his death.
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* The [[Norbert Wiener Prize in Applied Mathematics]] was endowed in 1967 in honor of Norbert Wiener by MIT's mathematics department and is provided jointly by the [[American Mathematical Society]] and [[Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics]].
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* The [[Norbert Wiener Award for Social and Professional Responsibility]] awarded annually by [[CPSR]], was established in 1987 in honor of Wiener to recognize contributions by computer professionals to socially responsible use of computers.
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* The crater [[Wiener (crater)|Wiener]] on the [[Far side (Moon)|far side]] of the [[Moon]] is named after him.
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* The [[Wiener sausage]] (in mathematics) was named for him.
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* The Norbert Wiener Center for Harmonic Analysis and Applications, at the [[University of Maryland, College Park]], is named in his honor.<ref>[http://www.norbertwiener.umd.edu/ Norbert Wiener Center for Harmonic Analysis and Applications], [[University of Maryland, College Park]]</ref>
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* Robert A. Heinlein named a spaceship after him in his 1957 novel [[Citizen of the Galaxy]]; a 'Free Trader' ship called the ''Norbert Wiener'' mentioned in Chapter 14.
==Work==
==Work==
{{quote|Information is information not matter or energy|Norbert Wiener|[[Cybernetics]] (1948, p. 155)}} <!-- Is this quote accurate w/r/t punctuation? No comma or semicolon or dash after 'information'? -->
{{quote|Information is information not matter or energy|Norbert Wiener|[[Cybernetics]] (1948, p. 155)}} <!-- Is this quote accurate w/r/t punctuation? No comma or semicolon or dash after 'information'? -->
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Wiener was as a pioneer in the study of [[stochastic processes|stochastic]] and [[noise]] processes, contributing work relevant to [[electronic engineering]], [[electronic communication]], and [[control system]]s.
+
Wiener was as a pioneer in the study of [[stochastic processes|stochastic]] and [[noise]] processes, contributing work relevant to [[control system]]s.
Wiener also founded [[cybernetics]], a field that formalizes the notion of [[feedback]] and has implications for [[engineering]], [[systems control]], [[computer science]], [[biology]], [[philosophy]], and the organization of [[society]]. He was influenced by [[William Ross Ashby]].
Wiener also founded [[cybernetics]], a field that formalizes the notion of [[feedback]] and has implications for [[engineering]], [[systems control]], [[computer science]], [[biology]], [[philosophy]], and the organization of [[society]]. He was influenced by [[William Ross Ashby]].
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[[Image:Wiener process 3d.png|thumb|230px|In the mathematical field of probability, the [[Wiener sausage]] is a neighborhood of the trace of a [[Brownian motion]] up to a time ''t'', given by taking all points within a fixed distance of Brownian motion. It can be visualized as a sausage of fixed radius whose centerline is Brownian motion.]]
[[Image:Wiener process 3d.png|thumb|230px|In the mathematical field of probability, the [[Wiener sausage]] is a neighborhood of the trace of a [[Brownian motion]] up to a time ''t'', given by taking all points within a fixed distance of Brownian motion. It can be visualized as a sausage of fixed radius whose centerline is Brownian motion.]]
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===Wiener equation===
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A simple mathematical representation of [[Brownian motion]], the [[Wiener equation]], named after Wiener, assumes the current [[velocity]] of a [[fluid]] particle fluctuates.
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===Wiener filter===
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In signal processing, the [[Wiener filter]] is a [[filter (signal processing)|filter]] proposed by Wiener during the 1940s and published in 1949. Its purpose is to reduce the amount of [[noise]] present in a signal by comparison with an estimation of the desired noiseless signal.
===In mathematics===
===In mathematics===
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{{Cybernetics}}
{{Cybernetics}}
{{Systems}}
{{Systems}}
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{{Winners of the National Medal of Science|math-stat-comp}}
Norbert Wiener (November 26, 1894, Columbia, Missouri – March 18, 1964, Stockholm, Sweden) was an American mathematician.
A famous child prodigy, Wiener went on to become a pioneer in the study of stochastic and noise processes, contributing work relevant to electronic engineering, electronic communication, and control systems.
Wiener was the first child of Leo Wiener and Bertha Kahn, both Ashkenazi Jews of Polish and German descent, respectively. Employing teaching methods of his own invention, Leo educated Norbert at home until 1903, except for a brief interlude when Norbert was 7 years of age. Wiener became a child prodigy in part due to his father's tutelage. Earning his living teaching German and Slavic languages, Leo read widely and accumulated a personal library from which the young Norbert benefited greatly. Leo also had ample ability in mathematics, and tutored his son in the subject until he left home.
After graduating from Ayer High School in 1906 at 11 years of age, Wiener entered Tufts College. He was awarded a BA in mathematics in 1909 at the age of 14, whereupon he began graduate studies in zoology at Harvard]]. In 1910 he transferred to Cornell to study philosophy.
The next year he returned to Harvard, while still continuing his philosophical studies. Back at Harvard, Wiener came under the influence of Edward Vermilye Huntington, whose mathematical interests ranged from axiomatic foundations to problems posed by engineering. Harvard awarded Wiener a Ph.D. in 1912, when he was a mere 18, for a dissertation on mathematical logic, supervised by Karl Schmidt, the essential results of which were published as Wiener (1914). In that dissertation, he was the first to see that the ordered pair can be defined in terms of elementary set theory. Hence relations can be wholly grounded in set theory, so that the theory of relations does not require any axioms or primitive notions distinct from those of set theory. In 1921, Kazimierz Kuratowski proposed a simplification of Wiener's definition of the ordered pair, and that simplification has been in common use ever since.
In 1914, Wiener traveled to Europe, to study under Bertrand Russell and G. H. Hardy at Cambridge University, and under David Hilbert and Edmund Landau at the University of Göttingen. In 1915-16, he taught philosophy at Harvard, then worked for [General Electric and wrote for the Encyclopedia Americana. When World War I broke out, Oswald Veblen invited him to work on ballistics at the Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland. Thus Wiener, an eventual pacifist, wore a uniform 1917-18. Living and working with other mathematicians strengthened and deepened his interest in mathematics.
After the war, Wiener was unable to secure a position at Harvard and was rejected for a position at the University of Melbourne. At W. F. Osgood's invitation, Wiener became an instructor in mathematics at MIT, where he spent the remainder of his career, rising to Professor.
During World War II, his work on the automatic aiming and firing of anti-aircraft guns led Wiener to communication theory and eventually to formulate cybernetics. After the war, his prominence helped MIT to recruit a research team in cognitive science, made up of researchers in neuropsychology and the mathematics and biophysics of the nervous system, including Warren Sturgis McCulloch and Walter Pitts. These men went on to make pioneering contributions to computer science and artificial intelligence. Shortly after the group was formed, Wiener broke off all contact with its members. Speculation still flourishes as to why this split occurred.
Wiener went on to break new ground in cybernetics, robotics, computer control, and automation. He shared his theories and findings with other researchers, and credited the contributions of others. These included Soviet researchers and their findings. Wiener's connections with them placed him under suspicion during the Cold War. He was a strong advocate of automation to improve the standard of living, and to overcome economic underdevelopment. His ideas became influential in India, whose government he advised during the 1950s.
Wiener declined an invitation to join the Manhattan Project. After the war, he became increasingly concerned with what he saw as political interference in scientific research, and the militarization of science. His article "A Scientist Rebels" in the January 1947 issue of The Atlantic Monthly urged scientists to consider the ethical implications of their work. After the war, he refused to accept any government funding or to work on military projects. The way Wiener's stance towards nuclear weapons and the Cold War contrasted with that of John von Neumann is the central theme of ``John Von Neumann and Norbert Wiener
" Heims (1980).
File:Wiener process 3d.pngIn the mathematical field of probability, the Wiener sausage is a neighborhood of the trace of a Brownian motion up to a time t, given by taking all points within a fixed distance of Brownian motion. It can be visualized as a sausage of fixed radius whose centerline is Brownian motion.
The Wiener process is a continuous-time stochastic process named in honor of Wiener. It is often called Brownian motion', after Robert Brown. It is one of the best known Lévy processes, càdlàg stochastic processes with stationary statistical independence increments, and occurs frequently in pure and applied mathematics, economics and physics.
Wiener's tauberian theorem is a 1932 result of Wiener. It put the capstone on the field of tauberian theorems in summability theory, on the face of it a chapter of real analysis, by showing that most of the known results could be encapsulated in a principle from harmonic analysis. As now formulated, the theorem of Wiener has no obvious connection to tauberian theorems, which deal with infinite series; the translation from results formulated for integrals, or using the language of functional analysis and Banach algebras, is however a relatively routine process once the idea is grasped.
The Paley–Wiener theorem relates growth properties of entire functions on Cn and Fourier transformation of Schwartz distributions of compact support.
The Wiener–Khinchin theorem, also known as the Wiener – Khintchine theorem and sometimes as the Khinchin – Kolmogorov theorem, states that the power spectral density of a wide-sense-stationary random process is the Fourier transform of the corresponding autocorrelation function.
An abstract Wiener space is a mathematical object in measure theory, used to construct a "decent", strictly positive and locally finite measure on an infinite-dimensional vector space. Wiener's original construction only applied to the space of real-valued continuous paths on the unit interval, known as classical Wiener space. Leonard Gross provided the generalization to the case of a general separableBanach space.
The notion of a Banach space itself was independently discovered by both Wiener and Stefan Banach at around the same time.[2]
Wiener wrote many books and hundreds of articles:[3]
1914, "A simplification in the logic of relations" in Jean van Heijenoort, 1967. From Frege to Godel: A Source Book in Mathematical Logic, 1879-1931. Harvard Univ. Press: 224-27.
1930, Extrapolation, Interpolation and Smoothing of Stationary Time Series with Engineering Applications. MIT Press. (Originally classified, finally published in 1949; the 1942 version of this monograph was nicknamed "the yellow peril" because of the color of the cover and the difficulty of the subject. [1])
1948, Cybernetics: Or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine. Paris, France: Librairie Hermann & Cie, and Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
↑Steve P. Heims, 1977: Gregory Bateson and the mathematicians: From interdisciplinary interaction to societal functions, Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, Vol. 13. No. 2, pp. 141-159, Wiley Periodicals, Inc., A Wiley Company
↑F. Albiac and N. Kalton, Topics in Banach Space Theory (GTM 233). New York: Springer 2006. p. 15
Conway, F., and Siegelman, J., 2005. Dark Hero of the Information Age: in search of Norbert Wiener, the father of cybernetics. Basic Books, New York. 423pp. ISBN 0-7382-0368-8
Montagnini, Leone, 2005. Le Armonie del disordine. Norbert Wiener Matematico-Filosofo del Novecento. Istituto Veneto di Scienze Lettere ed Arti, Venezia, 2005. XVI, 314 pp. ISBN 88-88143-41-6
Ivor Grattan-Guinness, 2000. The Search for Mathematical Roots 1870-1940. Princeton Uni. Press.
Bluma, Lars, 2005. Norbert Wiener und die Entstehung der Kybernetik im Zweiten Weltkrieg. Münster.
Michel Faucheux, Nobert Wiener, le Golem et la cybernetique, Editions du Sandre,2008
Heims, Steve J., 1980. John von Neumann and Norbert Wiener: From Mathematics to the Technologies of Life and Death. MIT Press.
Heims, Steve J., 1993. Constructing a Social Science for Postwar America. The Cybernetics Group, 1946-1953. MIT Press.
Ilgauds, Hans Joachim, 1980. Norbert Wiener.
Masani, P. Rustom, 1990. Norbert Wiener 1894-1964. Birkhauser.
A brief profile of Dr. Wiener is given in The Observernewspaper, Sunday, 28 January 1951.