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Claude Shannon
US scientist Claude Elwood Shannon was author of The
Mathematical Theory of Communication (PDF),
a seminal work in information theory once described as
"the magna carta of the information age".
life
Born in 1916, Shannon was a distant relation of Thomas
Edison and shared that inventor's passion for tinkering
but not, apparently, his mania for self-promotion. He
grew up in Gaylord, Michigan, almost as a parody of the
fin de siecle boy scientist: building model planes, a
radio-controlled boat and telegraph system, earning pocket
money from a paper route and delivering telegrams.
Shannon graduated from the University of Michigan in 1936
with a Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering and
Bachelor of Science in Mathematics. He moved to MIT the
same year, as research assistant in the Department of
Electrical Engineering.
Research at MIT initially involved the Bush differential
analyzer, at that time a state-of-the-art electro-mechanical
calculator developed by Vannevar Bush (considered in the
profile of the web),
author of the 'memex' concept that's sometimes considered
the precursor of hypertext. Shannon became interested
in the theory of electrical circuits, reflected in his
Master's thesis about use of Boolean algebra in analysis
of data systems.
thesis
The thesis is considered a seminal contribution to circuit
design, providing a theoretical basis for the silicon
chip. Under Bush's auspices, Shannon moved to MIT's Maths
Department, with a doctoral dissertation on An Algebra
for Theoretical Genetics. Interest in the biosciences
continued; like Turing he considered that information
theory could be applied to biological systems. In 1940
he was awarded a Masters in Electrical Engineering and
Doctorate in Mathematics.
Reflecting the twin parents of the internet - business
and the military - Shannon worked in Bell Labs and the
Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton on automated
control systems for anti-aircraft guns.
His major work on information theory, A Mathematical
Theory of Communication appeared in 1948, providing
a foundation for mathematical analysis of information
systems that range from the telegraph to face-to-face
conversation. It's been described as "the magna carta
of the information age".
There's an engineering perspective in the Network guide.
For a a dissenting view, emphasising content analysis,
see Dan Schiller's Theorizing Communication: A History
(New York, Oxford Uni Press 96)).
Shannon's subsequent publications included Communication
Theory of Secrecy Systems, Programming a Computer
for Playing Chess, studies of circuit reliability
and the stock market, particularly optimal investment
strategies.
After a fellowship at the Center for the Study of the
Behavioral Sciences in Palo Alto ("I'm a machine
and you're a machine, and we both think, don't we?")
he became Donner Professor of Science at MIT in 1959,
retaining an affiliation with Bell Labs until 1972.
cycles, rats and pogo-sticks
Apart from inventing a rocket-powered Frisbee and juggling
eggs while riding his unicycle through academic buildings,
Shannon was famous for his interest in automata and toys,
with a collection that included seven chess machines,
mechanical rats, a petrol-powered pogo-stick, a two-seater
unicycle, a WC Fields automaton, a machine to solve the
Rubik cube and a Roman numeral-based calculator.
bibliography
There's a full bibliography
of Shannon's published papers at the AT&T research
labs site. It is drawn from Claude Elwood Shannon:
Collected Papers (Piscataway, IEEE Press 93) edited
by Neil Sloane & Aaron Wyner.
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