PERSON
Gregory Bateson
British-American polymath (1904–1980) — anthropologist, cyberneticist, ecologist — whose <em>ecology of mind</em> and concept of deutero-learning provided the theoretical spine of his daughter's work on AI.
Gregory Bateson was Mary Catherine Bateson's father and one of the twentieth century's most original systems thinkers. He moved between anthropology, psychiatry, cybernetics, and ecology with a fluidity his contemporaries treated as incommensurable — pursuing a pattern he could sense but not yet name across domains that institutional science had separated. His concepts of deutero-learning, the double bind, and the pattern that connects became foundational tools in systems theory, family therapy, and ecological philosophy. For his daughter, his most consequential bequest was a mode of thinking: the habit of looking for pattern across domains that specialization had walled off, and the insistence that mind is a property of systems, not an artifact of individual brains.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Bateson's participation in the Macy Conferences on Cybernetics (1946–1953) placed him at the founding moment of the computer age — alongside Norbert Wiener, John von Neumann, Claude Shannon, and others building the theoretical foundations of artificial intelligence. But Bateson's cybernetics took a different direction from the engineering path that
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