GregoryBateson

Last edit March 1, 2006
obviously, an example of a "great mind."

GregoryBateson was an anthropologist and philosopher who applied cybernetics to the life sciences.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregory_Bateson


In his books, he defines the basic unit of information as a DifferenceThatMakesaDifference and elaborates this idea into the growth processes of life, the mind, and the universe, seeing the world around us and in us as intertwined communication circuits (YouCannotNotCommunicate - not by GB but related)

He claimed that progress in thinking is made by the interplay of strict and loose thinking, and that TheMapIsNotTheTerritory.

When studying the world, he always tried to understand the whole of the picture. He was looking for the ThePatternWhichConnects in superficially diverse areas as:

  • Mind and nature (also the title of one of his last books)
  • Human culture (he studied the folks over at PapuaNewGuinea as well as the rest of the world)
  • Learning, learning to learn, learning to learn to learn...
  • Creativity, humor, schizophrenia, alcoholics
  • Language and communication processes in and between cultures, cells, the universe, steam engines, trees, governments, humans and dolphins, cats, dogs
  • Growth
  • Complexity and combination of information, as related to:
  • Moire effects, holography, the stripes of zebras
  • InformationTheory, system theory
  • Symmetry in flowers and armaments races
  • this list could go on forever, so you should read his books

It feels like one of his passions was to make the patterns behind communication processes evident and find explicit knowledge about them.

Some of his books include:

  • "Steps to an Ecology of Mind. Collected Essays in Anthropology, Psychiatry, Evolution, and Epistemology", ISBN 0226039056 his chef d'oeuvre, methinks
  • "Mind and Nature : A Necessary Unity", [ASIN: 0525155902], every schoolboy should know
  • "Naven", about his experiences in PapuaNewGuinea

He was married with anthropologist MargaretMead, their daughter is named Mary Catherine.

GregoryBateson died in 1980, but his spirit will live on for a long time.

-- ManuelSimoni

Please feel free to edit and amend.


The Manuscript

Gregory Bateson, Esalen, October 5, 1978

 So there it is in words
 Precise
 And if you read between the lines
 You will find nothing there
 For that is the discipline I ask
 Not more, not less 

Not the world as it is Nor ought to be - Only the precision The skeleton of truth I do not dabble in emotion Hint at implications Evoke the ghosts of old forgotten creeds.

All that is for the preacher The hypnotist, therapist and missionary They will come after me And use the little that I said To bait more traps For those who cannot bear The lonely Skeleton of Truth


CategoryScientist