Amelia, Djamil, Christian, and Rudy join for a discussion on the history of Soviet Cybernetics and the use of computers for socialist planning. We discuss the origins of Cybernetics, its role as a reform movement in the sciences, and why cybernetics became attractive to the Soviet academy in the 50s, before moving to the biographies and projects of Anatoly Kitov and Viktor Glushkov. We reflect on the failures of OGAS, and what could have been done better, as well as its positive legacy and finish by discussing the ways in which cybernetics was kept alive until the collapse of the USSR and the remaining possibilities for computerized planning.
References:
B. Peters – How Not to Network a Nation: The Uneasy History of the Soviet Internet
L. Graham – Science, Philosophy and Human Behavior in the Soviet Union
S. Gerontovich – InterNyet: Why the Soviet Union did not build a nationwide computer network
S. Gerontovich – From Newspeak to Cyberspeak: A History of Soviet Cybernetics
O. V. Kitova & V. A. Kitov – Anatoly Kitov and Victor Glushkov: Pioneers of Russian Digital Economy and Informatics
V. Pikhorovich – Glushkov and His Ideas: Cybernetics of the Future
Y. Revich – The Story of How the USSR Did Not Need the Pioneer of Cybernetics
D. West – Cybernetics for the command economy: Foregrounding entropy in late Soviet planning
B. Peters – How Not to Network a Nation: The Uneasy History of the Soviet Internet
L. Graham – Science, Philosophy and Human Behavior in the Soviet Union
S. Gerontovich – InterNyet: Why the Soviet Union did not build a nationwide computer network
S. Gerontovich – From Newspeak to Cyberspeak: A History of Soviet Cybernetics
O. V. Kitova & V. A. Kitov – Anatoly Kitov and Victor Glushkov: Pioneers of Russian Digital Economy and Informatics
V. Pikhorovich – Glushkov and His Ideas: Cybernetics of the Future
Y. Revich – The Story of How the USSR Did Not Need the Pioneer of Cybernetics
D. West – Cybernetics for the command economy: Foregrounding entropy in late Soviet planning