PERSON
Humberto Maturana
Chilean biologist (1928–2021) who co-developed <em>autopoiesis</em> with Varela in the early 1970s — a partnership that produced the organizational framework at the core of this volume's argument.
Humberto Maturana was the senior partner in the collaboration that produced autopoiesis. Born in Santiago, Chile, he studied medicine at the University of Chile, received his PhD in biology from Harvard in 1958, and worked with Warren McCulloch at MIT before returning to Chile. His work on frog vision in the early 1960s (with Jerome Lettvin, Walter Pitts, and McCulloch) produced the foundational paper "What the Frog's Eye Tells the Frog's Brain" (1959), which demonstrated that the frog retina does not simply transmit visual information — it actively constructs a functional world of bug-like moving objects. This empirical finding became the germ of the autopoietic framework developed a decade later with his student Francisco Varela.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The Varela-Maturana collaboration was uneven. Maturana was sixteen years older and had been Varela's teacher; the two worked together intensively through the early 1970s, producing the foundational autopoietic publications, but diverged intellectually in subsequent decades. Maturana emphasized the biological-foundational aspects of the framework and resisted its extension to
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