Kenneth Craik

Kenneth Craik
Born1914
Edinburgh
Died8 May 1945
Cambridge, England
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of Edinburgh
ThesisThe Experimental Study of Visual Adaptation (1940)
Academic work
InfluencedWarren McCulloch
13 Abercromby Place, Edinburgh
The grave of Kenneth Craik, Dean Cemetery, Edinburgh

Kenneth James William Craik (/krk/; 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]

  1. ^ Bertelson, Paul (May 1966). "Central Intermittency Twenty Years Later". Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. 18 (2): 153–163. doi:10.1080/14640746608400022. ISSN 0033-555X. PMID 5327439.
  2. ^ McCulloch, Warren S. "Recollections of the many sources of cybernetics." ASC Forum. Vol. 6. No. 2. 1974.