The Symposium on Principles of Self-Organization was held at Allerton House on 8–9 June 1960. It was a key conference in the development of cybernetics and was in many ways a continuation of the Macy Conferences. it was organised by Heinz von Foerster through the Biological Computer Laboratory based at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.[1] It was sponsored by the Information Systems Branch of the U.S. Office of Naval Research.[2]
Participants
There were 38 male participants:[1]
Department of Electrical Engineering at the University of Illinois
This was the host organisation.
- Murray Babcock
 - Heinz von Foerster
 - Alfred Inselberg
 - Lars Löfgren
 - Albert Mullin
 - Albert Novikoff
 - Paul Weston
 - George Zopf
 
Other participants from Illinois
- John Bowman, Technological Institute, Northwestern University
 - Scott Cameron, Armour Research Foundation
 - Peter Greene, Committee on Mathematical Biology, University of Chicago
 - Friedrich Hayek, Committee on Social Thought, University of Chicago
 - George Jacobi, Armour Research Foundation
 - John R. Platt, Department of Physics, University of Chicago
 - Stephen Sherwood, Illinois State Psychiatric Institute, Chicago
 - A Shimbel, Illinois State Psychiatric Institute, Chicago
 
Cambridge Massachusetts
- Manuel Blum, W. S. McCulloch Room, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
 - Jack Cowan, W. S. McCulloch Room, MIT
 - Jerome I. Elkind, Bolt, Beranek, Newman Inc.
 - Warren McCulloch, W. S. McCulloch Room, MIT
 - Leo Verbeek, W. S. McCulloch Room, MIT
 
Other participants
- Saul Amarel, Radio Corporation of America
 - Ross Ashby,
 - Stafford Beer, United Steel Companies
 - Ludwig von Bertalanffy
 - Raymond Beurle, English Electric Valve Company
 - Hewitt Crane, Stanford Research Institute, Menlo Park, California
 - Joseph Hawkins
 - Hans Oestriecher
 - Gordon Pask
 - Anatol Rapaport
 - Charles Rosen
 - Frank Rosenblatt
 - Jack E. Steele
 - Roger Sperry
 - John Tooley
 - David Willis
 - Marshal Yovits
 
Two women participated, Kathy Forbes providing secretarial services and Cornelia Schaeffer of Athenium Publishers providing assistance in preparing the subsequent publication of the transactions of the symposium.[3]
References
- 1 2 Hutchinson, Jamie. ""Nerve center" of the cybernetic world Heinz von Foerster and the Biological Computer Laboratory". Biological Computer Laboratory. University of Illinois. Retrieved 24 October 2016.
 - ↑ "Frontispiece". International Tracts in Computer Science and Technology and Their Application. 9 (Principles of Self-Organization). 1962.
 - ↑ "Preface". International Tracts in Computer Science and Technology and Their Application. 9 (Principles of Self-Organization). 1962.
 
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