Article ID: CBB828169755

Cybernetic Times: Norbert Wiener, John Stroud, and the ‘Brain Clock’ Hypothesis (2020)

unapi

In 1955, Norbert Wiener suggested a sociological model according to which all forms of culture ultimately depended on the temporal coordination of human activities, in particular their synchronization. The basis for Wiener’s model was provided by his insights into the temporal structures of cerebral processes. This article reconstructs the historical context of Wiener’s ‘brain clock’ hypothesis, largely via his dialogues with John W. Stroud and other scholars working at the intersection of neurophysiology, experimental psychology, and electrical engineering. Since the 19th century, physiologists and psychologists have been conducting experimental investigations into the relation between time and the brain. Using innovative instruments and technologies, Stroud rehearsed these experiments, in part without paying any attention at all to the experimental traditions involved. Against this background, this article argues that the novelty of Wiener’s model relies largely on his productive rephrasing of physiological and psychological findings that had been established long before the Second World War.

...More
Included in

Article Stefanos Geroulanos; Leif Weatherby (2020) Cybernetics and the Human Sciences. History of the Human Sciences (pp. 3-11). unapi

Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB828169755/

Similar Citations

Article Halpern, Orit; (2005)
Dreams for Our Perceptual Present: Temporality, Storage, and Interactivity in Cybernetics (/isis/citation/CBB000850144/)

Article Peters, Benjamin; (2007)
The cybernetics of Nabokov's “beneficence”: An anachronism (/isis/citation/CBB001180044/)

Article Ronan Le Roux; (2020)
Entre hasard et programme: Monod, Jacob et la cybernétique (/isis/citation/CBB986276851/)

Thesis Mentor, Steven Daniel; (2004)
A Dissertation for Cyborgs: The Birth of a Technoscientific Monster, 1948--1985 (/isis/citation/CBB001561759/)

Article Peters, Benjamin; (2008)
Betrothal and betrayal: The Soviet translation of Norbert Wiener's early cybernetics (/isis/citation/CBB001180043/)

Book Jeremy Christopher Ganz; (2017)
Intracranial Epidural Bleeding: History, Management, and Pathophysiology (/isis/citation/CBB139992400/)

Chapter Asaro, Peter M.; (2008)
From Mechanisms of Adaptation to Intelligence Amplifiers: The Philosophy of W. Ross Ashby (/isis/citation/CBB000760385/)

Article Eling, Paul; (2013)
Neuroanniversary 2013 (/isis/citation/CBB001320616/)

Book Kären Wigen; Caroline Winterer; (2020)
Time in Maps: From the Age of Discovery to Our Digital Era (/isis/citation/CBB426688366/)

Book Richard D. G. Irvine; (2020)
An Anthropology of Deep Time: Geological Temporality and Social Life (/isis/citation/CBB205554969/)

Book Craig Callender; (2017)
What Makes Time Special? (/isis/citation/CBB395852942/)

Book Zara Mirmalek; (2020)
Making Time on Mars (/isis/citation/CBB714285733/)

Book Carlo Rovelli; (2018)
The Order of Time (/isis/citation/CBB094248164/)

Article Halpern, Orit; (2012)
Cybernetic Sense (/isis/citation/CBB001252302/)

Book Bluma, Lars; (2005)
Norbert Wiener und die Enstehung der Kybernetik im Zweiten Weltkrieg (/isis/citation/CBB000760740/)

Article Baptiste Rappin; (2021)
La conceptualisation de l’organisation chez Norbert Wiener entre science et ontothéologie (/isis/citation/CBB165544838/)

Authors & Contributors
Peters, Benjamin
Halpern, Orit
Ronan Le Roux
Shin, Youjung
Richard D. G. Irvine
Baptiste Rappin
Concepts
Cybernetics
Neurosciences
Temporality
Time perception
Neurophysiology
Time measurement
Time Periods
20th century, late
21st century
20th century
20th century, early
19th century
18th century
Places
United States
Soviet Union
Russia
California (U.S.)
Great Britain
Institutions
Mars Exploration Rover Mission (U.S.)
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment