(To appear in Cybernetics
and Systems, 1998)
In
Memory of a Pioneer (Silvio Ceccato, 1914-1997)
Silvio Ceccato, the founder and director of the first Center
for Cybernetics in Milan, Italy, died at the beginning of
December at the age of 83 years. Exactly five decades earlier he
had been the first in Europe to apply the cybernetic principle of
self-organization to the domains of concept formation and
language. This was a heretical undertaking in those years because
the psychology of language was dominated by the two incompatibly
opposed schools of Skinner and Chomsky. The kind of analysis of
mental operations which Ceccato had developed on the basis of
Bridgmans suggestions of operational analysis were
thoroughly ignored by other researchers in the field. The final
report of Ceccatos project that was sponsored by the Air
Research and Development Command of the US Air Force, Linguistic
analysis and programming for mechanical translation, was
published as a book by Gordon and Breach in 1962, but only some
twenty years later similar ideas began to crop up in the
psycholinguistic literature; e.g. the notion of conceptual
networks as foundation for the formation of sentences and the
essentially semantic underpinnings of syntax.
One of the reasons why Ceccato remained little known in the
English-speaking world was of course the fact that none of the
dozen books he wrote in the seventies and eighties was
translated. A deeper reason, however, was the fundamental
incompatibility of his epistemological position with the dogma of
knowledge as a representation of reality. Not until now that the
idea of cognitive construction has gained a certain amount of
ground, will it be possible to recognize Ceccato as an inspired
pioneer of a truly cybernetic theory of knowledge.
Ceccato was a brilliant speaker and his many appearances in
Italian TV as well as his countless articles in the popular press
gave him the reputation of a fascinating and somewhat mysterious
scientist. His serious writings, on the other hand, are not easy
fare and few readers took the trouble to follow a way of thinking
that went against accepted beliefs of traditional philosophy. At
a conference in Turin in the 1960s, a famous Italian philosopher
was overheard to comment: "If Ceccato were right, all of us
would be fools." - Ceccatos intellectual fate, one
could say, was not unlike that of Giambattista Vico, the first
constructivist thinker at the beginning of the 18th century.
All who worked at the Milan Center for Cybernetics some thirty
or forty years ago, will remember Ceccato as an uncommonly
farsighted, original, uncompromising teacher and friend.
Ernst von Glasersfeld