Cybernetics and Its Modern Descendants
Status: CONCEPTUAL ANCESTOR. Modern instantiation and completion, not rediscovery.
What cybernetics anticipated
Observer/purpose inside the system boundary. Von Foerster's second-order cybernetics (1974) moves the observer into the system description. This is the meta-epistemic commitment behind the human-as-controller axiom.
Normative objective lineage. Von Foerster (1973): "Act always so as to increase the number of choices." Direct normative ancestor of "optimize for capacity for self-directed action."
State estimation as necessary for regulation. Conant & Ashby (1970) proved "every good regulator of a system must be a model of that system." Formal rationale for the AI state-estimator requirement.
Functional decomposition for viability. Beer's Viable System Model (1984) decomposes viability into five interacting subsystems, including System 5 (identity/policy closure) as the function that determines organizational identity -- structural analog to "the human decides direction/values."
Human-machine cooperative control. Licklider (1960) described human-computer "symbiosis" aimed at cooperative decision-making and control.
What cybernetics did NOT specify
- A concrete objective function stated as "maximize the regulated system's capacity for self-regulation" in the engineering sense -- with measurable state variables, measurement model, and control laws. Von Foerster's imperative is normative, not operational.
- Neurobiological grounding of capacity degradation. Catecholamine-PFC dynamics and controllability circuitry are modern neuroscience.
- A single-person VSM + AI-as-subsystem design pattern.
- Integration of neuroscience into cybernetic regulator design.
Positioning statement
This architecture is a modern instantiation of cybernetic commitments -- observer-included, autonomy-preserving, model-based regulation -- completed with neurobiological grounding and AI understanding capabilities that the classical tradition did not have. The conceptual structure is anticipated. The engineering specification is not.
Sources
- Von Foerster 1973, 1974
- Conant & Ashby 1970
- Beer 1984
- Licklider 1960