The Origins of Cyberspace collection described as lots 1-255 will first be offered as a single lot, subject to a reserve price. If this price is not reached, the collection will be immediately offered as individual lots as described in the catalogue as lots 1-255.
MCCULLOCH, Warren S., Walter PITTS and Herbert D. LANDAHL. A statistical consequence of the logical calculus of nervous nets. Offprint from Bulletin of Mathematical Biophysics 5 (1943). Rebound in modern buckram. OOC 785. -- MCCULLOCH. The brain as a computing machine. Offprint from Electrical Engineering (June 1949). Without wrappers as issued. McCulloch used electrical engineering terminology to show how the brain may be likened to a digital computer consisting of ten billion relays (neurons). OOC 786. -- MACKAY, Donald M. and MCCULLOCH. The limiting information capacity of a neuronal link. Offprint from Bulletin of Mathematical Biophysics 14 (1952). Without wrappers as issued. OOC 787. -- MCCULLOCH. Mysterium iniquitatis of sinful man aspiring into the place of God. Offprint from Scientific Monthly 80 (1955). Without wrappers as issued. OOC 788. -- MCCULLOCH. Toward some circuitry of ethical robots or an observational science of the genesis of social evaluation in the mind-like behavior of artifacts. Offprint from Acta Biotheoretica 11 (1955). Without wrappers as issued. On the application of information theory and cybernetics to problems involving adaptive, perceptive, thoughtful, or communicative behavior in both man and machines. OOC 789. -- MCCULLOCH, PITTS, P.D. WALL and Jerome LETTVIN. "Factors limiting the maximum impulse transmitting ability of an afferent system of nerve fibers." Mimeographed typescript. Cambridge: MIT Research Library of Electronics, n.d. Unbound as issued. OOC 790. -- MCCULLOCH. Embodiments of mind. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1965. Original blue cloth, pictorial dust-jacket. With signed autograph poem by McCulloch on the front free endpaper. OOC 791.
Details
MCCULLOCH, Warren S., Walter PITTS and Herbert D. LANDAHL. A statistical consequence of the logical calculus of nervous nets. Offprint from Bulletin of Mathematical Biophysics 5 (1943). Rebound in modern buckram. OOC 785. -- MCCULLOCH. The brain as a computing machine. Offprint from Electrical Engineering (June 1949). Without wrappers as issued. McCulloch used electrical engineering terminology to show how the brain may be likened to a digital computer consisting of ten billion relays (neurons). OOC 786. -- MACKAY, Donald M. and MCCULLOCH. The limiting information capacity of a neuronal link. Offprint from Bulletin of Mathematical Biophysics 14 (1952). Without wrappers as issued. OOC 787. -- MCCULLOCH. Mysterium iniquitatis of sinful man aspiring into the place of God. Offprint from Scientific Monthly 80 (1955). Without wrappers as issued. OOC 788. -- MCCULLOCH. Toward some circuitry of ethical robots or an observational science of the genesis of social evaluation in the mind-like behavior of artifacts. Offprint from Acta Biotheoretica 11 (1955). Without wrappers as issued. On the application of information theory and cybernetics to problems involving adaptive, perceptive, thoughtful, or communicative behavior in both man and machines. OOC 789. -- MCCULLOCH, PITTS, P.D. WALL and Jerome LETTVIN. "Factors limiting the maximum impulse transmitting ability of an afferent system of nerve fibers." Mimeographed typescript. Cambridge: MIT Research Library of Electronics, n.d. Unbound as issued. OOC 790. -- MCCULLOCH. Embodiments of mind. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1965. Original blue cloth, pictorial dust-jacket. With signed autograph poem by McCulloch on the front free endpaper. OOC 791.
Further details
For further information about The Origins of Cyberspace Library and to view the reference catalogue, please visit https://www.historyofscience.com.