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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Gordon_PaskGordon Pask - Wikipedia

    Andrew Gordon Speedie Pask (28 June 1928 – 29 March 1996) was a British cybernetician, inventor and polymath who made during his lifetime multiple contributions to cybernetics, educational psychology, educational technology, epistemology, chemical computing, architecture, and the performing arts.

  2. 29 de mar. de 1996 · Quick Info. Born. 28 June 1928. Derby, England. Died. 29 March 1996. London, England. Summary. Gordon Pask was an English polymath who made contributions to a wide variety of areas including cybernetics and psychology. View three larger pictures. Biography. Gordon Pask's parents were Mary and Percy Pask.

  3. Gordon Pask (1928–1996) is perhaps most widely remembered for his technical innovations in the field of automated teaching. Less widely appreciated are the theoretical principles embodied in Pask’s maverick machines.

  4. Andrew Gordon Speedie Pask (28 June 1928 – 29 March 1996) was an English cybernetician and psychologist who made significant contributions to cybernetics, instructional psychology, experimental epistemology and educational technology.

  5. Dandy of Cybernetics. Gordon Pask, who has died aged 67, spent his life developing an elegant theory of learning that stands without peer. His achievement was to establish a unifying framework that subsumes the subjectivity of human experience and the objectivity of scientific tradition.

  6. 1 de jul. de 2001 · Gordon Pask is rightly considered as one of the fathers of both first order and second order cybernetics. The latter refers to the novel epistemological paradigm where the observer, rather than be a purely external observer to the systems he studies, is invited to acknowledge that he, too, is a system, an observing system.

  7. 1 de abr. de 2008 · ABSTRACT. Despite his influence in art, architecture and theater, British cybernetician Gordon Pask is rarely acknowledged in histories of digital culture and virtually unknown in the history of art. Pask is better known as a theoretician than as an artist or designer, although his machines, artwork and theories were closely related.