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  1. William Ross Ashby (6 September 1903 – 15 November 1972) was an English psychiatrist and a pioneer in cybernetics, the study of the science of communications and automatic control systems in both machines and living things.

  2. The W. Ross Ashby Digital Archive. William Ross Ashby (1903-1972) was a British pioneer in the fields of cybernetics and systems theory.

  3. Ross Ashby (1903-1972) was a central figure of the post-war cybernetics movement in the UK, especially due to the popularity of his books Design for a Brain (1952) and An Introduction to Cybernetics (1956).

  4. William Ross Ashby (1903-1972) was a British pioneer in the fields of cybernetics and systems theory. He is best known for the law of requisite variety, the principle of self-organization, intelligence amplification, the good regulator theorem, building the automatically stabilizing Homeostat, and his books Design for a Brain (1952) and An ...

  5. Ross Ashby was a deeply original thinker, who produced innovative work in a number of different areas. He was a psychiatrist by training, and his core concern was in understanding how the mind and brain worked, to find “what principles must be followed when one...

  6. Journal of W. Ross Ashby. Ross started writing a journal in May 1928, when he was a 24 year old medical student at Barts Hospital in London. In it he recorded his thoughts, theories, and goals that would eventually bring him recognition as a pioneer in the fields of cybernetics and systems theory.

  7. William Ross Ashby (1903-1972) was a pioneer in cybernetics and systems theory and a key figure in the development of cybernetics in postwar Britain.