Kenneth Craik | |
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Born | 1914 Edinburgh |
Died | 8 May 1945 Cambridge, England |
Academic background | |
Alma mater | University of Edinburgh |
Thesis | The Experimental Study of Visual Adaptation (1940) |
Academic work | |
Influenced | Warren McCulloch |
Kenneth James William Craik (/kreɪk/; 1914 – 1945) was a Scottish philosopher and psychologist. A pioneer of cybernetics, he hypothesized that a human behaves basically as a servomechanism that controlled at discrete points in time.[1] He influenced Warren McCulloch, who once recounted that Einstein considered The Nature of Explanation a great book.[2]