Cybernetics And Human Knowing. Vol. 10, no. 2, pp. xx-xx “Heinz von Foerster – An Appreciation” (Revisited) Bernard Scott1 Reproduced below, with a few small edits, is a paper I wrote in 1979 for the International Cybernetics Newsletter, as part of its ‘founding fathers of cybernetics’ series (Scott, 1979). I offer it here as a contribution to this special issue of C&HK because (i) I believe my younger self did quite a good job of overviewing von Foerster’s career (recall, he ‘retired’ in 1976) and (ii) the article is not readily available to the current generation of scholars who, I hope, will be interested in finding out about cybernetics and exploring its history. I preface the 1979 paper with a Prologue in which I set the paper in context and draw attention to aspects of von Foerster’s early work that have perhaps been overlooked in recent years, especially with the particular interest given to his later writings on second order cybernetics. There is also an Epilogue in which I comment on developments post-1979 where von Foerster’s influence has been evident, in particular, work and writings that explicitly draw on von Foerster’s distinction between a first and second order cybernetics. Prologue The paper below, “Heinz von Foerster: An Appreciation,” first published in 1979 (Scott, 1979), was written when I was in my early thirties. I had by that time been a student of cybernetics for more than ten years. Like many others before and since, I was fascinated by the coming together within the cybernetics circle of a group of mutually supportive but disparate scholars of astonishing brilliance. As a way of understanding the discipline, I found myself summarizing for myself the main ideas and achievements of those scholars. I then proposed to Paul Hanika, editor of the International Cybernetics Newsletter, that he should commission and publish a series of papers on the ‘founding fathers of cybernetic’. He agreed this was a good idea. My paper about von Foerster was the first in this series and was followed by a two part article about Gordon Pask (Scott, 1980, 1982). Sadly, Hanika died not long after and the series came to a halt. In the absence of other contributions, I was preparing short papers about Warren McCulloch, Ross Ashby and Norbert Wiener. Perhaps one day they, too, will see the light of day. My article about von Foerster covered much ground in a short space. To do this, I found myself writing in a terse, aphoristic manner. To some extent, I took Heinz’s own writings as a model, though I cannot claim that I achieved the same level of masterly clarity. I have commented elsewhere on von Foerster’s work (Scott, 1996). More recently, I have written a short paper entitled “Second order cybernetics: an historical introduction,” in which I comment on developments that draw their inspiration from 1. Cranfield University, Royal Military College of Science, Shrivenham, Swindon, Wiltshire SN6 8LA, UK. Email: [email protected]field.ac.uk An Appreciation (Revisited) 153 von Foerster’s work (Scott, in press). It is interesting that, although it refers to the text in which von Foerster first made his famous distinction between a first and a second order cybernetics and clearly appreciates von Foerster’s reflexive goal of “explaining the observer to himself,” the 1979 paper does not highlight the first and second order distinction and its terminology. It took a while for that distinction and that terminology to become standard usage in cybernetics. The reader should perhaps also note that the distinction between first and second order cybernetics, where first order study is of observed systems and second order is of observing systems, was made almost as an aside in 1974, just two years before von Foerster’s retirement. In his later years, von Foerster became celebrated for having made that distinction and continued to write and present papers on that theme. See von Foerster and Poerksen (2002) for an account of von Foerster’s latter day interests and activities. The reader might like to know that when von Foerster read my tribute to him, he sent me a telegram, saying, “Congratulations! You have reversed evolution. Now the sons are inventing the fathers!” I am now wondering if there is some wise truth in this comment of Heinz. In the 1979 article, I refer to Heinz’s bringing a European sensibility to the more pragmatic American scene. In von Foerster and Poerksen (2002), he makes similar comment about himself (pp. 109-110). My 1979 article covers much of von Foerster’s work prior to 1974. As von Foerster makes clear, his early papers on molecular computation draw directly on Schroedinger’s (1944, 1958) classic texts What is Life and Mind and Matter. His later ethical work also draws upon the same source. Von Foerster’s ethical principle that the observer should “enter the domain of his own descriptions” is an inverse reading of Schroedinger’s statement of the Principle of Objectivation, the principle that the scientist in pursuit of objectivity necessarily does not include himself in his domain of descriptions (Schroedinger, 1967, pp. 126-137). In the early papers, we also see very clear evidence of von Foerster’s liberal view of what is ‘computation’, in particular ‘biological computation’, a topic also discussed in von Foerster and Poerksen (2002, pp. 54-59 & pp. 106-109). He adopts a far broader view than that used, for example, to characterize the operation of the general purpose digital computer. This broader view of computation very much parallels that of Warren McCulloch. Indeed it is evident that the early cyberneticians as a group spoke of computation in this broad biological way. See, for example, the fascinating discussions in Yovits and Cameron (1960) about the computations carried out by slime moulds as they migrate from one location to another. See especially the paper by Gordon Pask on “The natural history of networks” (Pask, 1960). What is also evident in von Foerster’s early work are parallel and complementary interests in the dynamics of self-organization and the forms of computation that constitute cognition in such systems. Following Pask’s usage, I like to refer to the former as “macro-level theory” and the latter as “micro-level theory.” The important point to appreciate is that functional models of cognition with information flows between parts of the system are static representations of structures that are continually 154 Bernard Scott being reconstituted, reproduced within the overall dynamics of self-organization. These relationships between the macro, the global dynamics, and the micro, the structure and functions, are fully brought out in the cybernetic literature by Maturana and Varela, with their conceptions of autopoiesis and organizational closure, and, especially by Gordon Pask. Gordon Pask, over a period of years, developed cybernetic models of learning processes which explicitly had macro and micro aspects. In his later writing, these models form the basis for his extended development of conversation theory. I was a collaborator with Pask on much of this work (see Scott, 1993). My own Ph.D. work carried out under Pask’s supervision, includes a complex model of skill acquisition. Micro-level structures are concept schemas and perceptual-motor procedural ‘operators’ that interact and transform as part of the evolution of accurate, fast-acting automatically applied subskills. Macro-level dynamic procedures allocate processing resources to sub-processes and manage the selection processes whereby successfully applied operators ‘survive’ and unsuccessful ones ‘die’ (Scott, 1976). (As an aside, John Holland’s model of ‘robust adaptation’, with which the reader may be familiar, is homomorphic to this model and similarly motivated; see, Holland, 1975.) Von Foerster clearly appreciates that cognition as a process is holistic. This is evidenced by his often repeated explication that ‘memory’ should not be confused with mere ‘storage’—that, in fact, perception, cognition and memory are indissoluble aspects of one integral cognitive system. In later years, following Varela and others, the term ‘enactive’ has been adopted to capture this view of cognition as an embodied holistic process, rather than as a static set of structures where information in various “representational forms” is passed around. I have commented elsewhere on how, as the ‘new’ paradigm of cognitive science was set up, the AI “symbolic representationalist” view of computation, as expounded by Minsky, Boden and others, threw out the baby of self-organization with the bath water of stuff deemed to be ‘old- fashioned’. In Scott (2000), in a discussion of Boden’s critique of the work of Jean Piaget, I expressed my concerns thus: Piaget, on many occasions, acknowledges that his underlying model is cybernetic in character. (See Boden, 1979, Chapter 7, for an extended discussion of Piaget’s affiliations with cybernetics). Other than acknowledge the existence of self-regulative properties as a necessary precursor to cognitive development, he gives no satisfactory account of them. Indeed, so often has his concept of “equilibration” been criticized that Boden (op. cit.) argues that it would be better if he cast his theory in computational, information processing form, where procedures may be spelled out in explicit detail. Although there is merit in such a recommendation, Boden confuses the issue by not only making a distinction between the “dynamics” of systems (i.e. their self-organizing properties) and the “structure” of systems (their forms of computation) but argues that the study of the latter (as evidenced by research in Artificial Intelligence, v. Boden, 1977) is the “new” cybernetics that has superseded the “classic” cybernetics. Whilst it is true historically that there has been a shift in emphasis, it is not true that the older problems and approaches have been finally resolved or found wanting.
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