A mind at play How Claude Shannon invented the information age

Jimmy Soni

Book - 2017

Chronicles the life and times of the lesser-known Information Age intellect, revealing how his discoveries and innovations set the stage for the digital era, influencing the work of such collaborators and rivals as Alan Turing, John von Neumann and Vannevar Bush.

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York, NY : Simon & Schuster 2017.
Language
English
Main Author
Jimmy Soni (author)
Other Authors
Rob Goodman (author)
Edition
First Simon & Schuster hardcover edition
Physical Description
xv, 366 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 329-346) and index.
ISBN
9781476766683
9781476766690
  • Gaylord
  • Ann Arbor
  • The room-sized brain
  • MIT
  • A decidedly unconventional type of youngster
  • Cold Spring Harbor
  • The labs
  • Princeton
  • Fire control
  • A six-day workweek
  • The unspeakable system
  • Turing
  • Manhattan
  • The utter dark
  • From intelligence to information
  • The bomb
  • Building a bandwagon
  • Mathematical intentions, honorable and otherwise
  • Wiener
  • A transformative year
  • TMI
  • "We urgently need the assistance of Dr. Claude E. Shannon"
  • The man-machines
  • The game of kings
  • Constructive dissatisfaction
  • Professor Shannon
  • Inside information
  • A gadgeteer's paradise
  • Peculiar motions
  • Kyoto
  • The illness
  • Aftershocks.
Review by Booklist Review

Claude Shannon (1916-2001) is to computer science what Newton is to physics: the mind that revolutionized its field. In his master's thesis, Shannon devised the binary digit, or the bit by which digital computers operate. Then, in a 1948 paper titled A Mathematical Theory of Communication, he demonstrated that information is not image, word, or sound but, rather, a quantity as subject to applied engineering as any physical material. Clearly a genius, but what sort of person was he? Soni and Goodman team up again, following their biography of Cato, to present a warm and engaging portrait that traces Shannon from his Michigan boyhood to his standing as a modest scientific celebrity. Although introverted, Shannon was not unsocial, and he was much liked and respected. Much of his personality is revealed in the authors' chronicle of Shannon's eclectic projects, from the serious, such as his work on cryptology for the government, to the whimsical, including his invention of a calculator for Roman numerals. Shannon's delight in solving puzzles was the perfect trait for a founder of the information age.--Taylor, Gilbert Copyright 2017 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A key figure in the development of digital technology has his achievements, if not his personality, burnished in this enlightening biography. Journalists Soni and Goodman, authors of Rome's Last Citizen, explore Claude Shannon's breakthroughs as a scientist at MIT and Bell Labs in the 1930s and '40s in electronics and telecommunications. His noteworthy discoveries include a way to rationally design circuits using Boolean algebra, and information theory, which understands communications as bits and shows how to compress them and remove noise-methods that underlie DVDs, the Internet, and much else. The authors' rundown of the science behind these advances, probing everything from the structure of language to the transatlantic telegraph, is lucid and fascinating. Unfortunately, Shannon's retiring demeanor and uneventful life don't make for a dramatic narrative. The authors' interpretation that Shannon's mental "playfulness" stimulated his scientific creativity also seems misconstrued: his serious accomplishments were achieved before the age of 33, when he was working at assigned tasks; during his later life he pursued various interests-whimsical robots, chess-playing machines, a scientific study of juggling-but achieved nothing noteworthy. Still, Soni and Goodman open an engrossing window onto what a mind hard at work can do. Agent: Laura Yorke, Carol Mann Agency. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Rather than limit their characterization of Claude Shannon (1916-2001) to his identity as the father of information theory, Soni, a former editor for the New York Observer and Washington Examiner, and Goodman, who has contributed to Slate, the Atlantic, and other publications (coauthors, Rome's Last Citizen), deftly illustrate how personality, humility, courage, and, above all, curiosity facilitated his historical contributions. In addition to sympathizing with Shannon's awestruck colleagues and starstruck graduate students, readers will come away with a feeling of having gotten to know the man personally. This biography follows its subject from his small-town roots up to his work at the Institute for Advanced Study, the National Defense Research Committee, and Bell Labs. It demonstrates that his triumphs in the fields of engineering, math, biology, and information theory are more frequently discussed than how he accomplished these feats: by treating everything interesting as important, stripping away superfluous details, and intuiting the nature of a problem. VERDICT For historians, philosophers, cryptographers, geeks, introverts, and anyone who has ever taken something apart to understand how it works.-Ricardo Laskaris, York Univ. Lib., Toronto © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The life of the man called "the father of information theory."Claude Shannon (1916-2001) made a contribution of signal importance to the modern world when he was only 21: he divined that instead of using mechanical switches, a modern computer would better employ electrical switches that, quite apart from simply controlling electrical flow, could also, "in principle, perform a passable imitation of a brain." That is, a machine could be designed to use logic. This scientific insight, write former Huffington Post managing editor Soni and journalist/speechwriter Goodman, co-authors of Rome's Last Citizen: The Life and Legacy of Cato, Mortal Enemy of Caesar (2012), ranks among the most important of the 20th century. Shannon went on to work in wartime cryptography and met fellow mathematician Alan Turing, but each was so constrained by security clearances that they could not compare notes and do something even bigger and better than Enigma and other projects. This account lacks a little of the spark and scientific depth of, say, Walter Isaacson's biography of Steve Jobs, but it covers the bases well. The authors write fluently, for instance, of how Boolean logic influenced Shannon's discovery: "And because Boole had shown how to resolve logic into a series of binary, true-false decisions, any system capable of representing binaries has access to the entire logical universe he described." They go on to describe some of Shannon's later discoveries, including a kind of algebra of genetics that might have been too much ahead of its time, as well as his considerable eccentricities. Shannon spent much of his later life tinkering rather than producing work approaching his youthful contributions. Still, readers will be intrigued by a mad scientist who rode the halls of Bell Labs atop a unicycle while juggling, a feat at which he did not excel. A welcome and inspiring account of a largely unsung herounsung because, the authors suggest, he accomplished something so fundamental that it's difficult to imagine a world without it. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

A Mind at Play INTRODUCTION The thin, white-haired man had spent hours wandering in and out of meetings at the International Information Theory Symposium in Brighton, England, before the rumors of his identity began to proliferate. At first the autograph seekers came in a trickle, and then they clogged hallways in long lines. At the evening banquet, the symposium's chairman took the microphone to announce that "one of the greatest scientific minds of our time" was in attendance and would share a few words--but once he arrived onstage, the thin, white-haired man could not make himself heard over the peals of applause. And then finally, when the noise had died down: " This is--ridiculous!" Lacking more to say, he removed three balls from his pocket and began to juggle. After it was over, someone asked the chairman to put into perspective what had just happened. "It was," he said, " as if Newton had showed up at a physics conference. It was 1985, and the juggler's work was long over, and just beginning. It had been nearly four decades since Claude Elwood Shannon published " the Magna Carta of the Information Age"--invented, in a single stroke, the idea of information. And yet the world his idea had made possible was only just coming into being. Now we live immersed in that world, and every email we have ever sent, every DVD and sound file we have ever played, and every Web page we have ever loaded bears a debt to Claude Shannon. It was a debt he was never especially keen to collect. He was a man immune to scientific fashion and insulated from opinion of all kinds, on all subjects, even himself, especially himself; a man of closed doors and long silences, who thought his best thoughts in spartan bachelor apartments and empty office buildings. A colleague called Shannon's information theory " a bomb." It was stunning in its scope--he had conceived of a new science nearly from scratch--and stunning in its surprise--he had gone years barely speaking a word of it to anyone. Of course, information existed before Shannon, just as objects had inertia before Newton. But before Shannon, there was precious little sense of information as an idea, a measurable quantity, an object fitted out for hard science. Before Shannon, information was a telegram, a photograph, a paragraph, a song. After Shannon, information was entirely abstracted into bits. The sender no longer mattered, the intent no longer mattered, the medium no longer mattered, not even the meaning mattered: a phone conversation, a snatch of Morse telegraphy, a page from a detective novel were all brought under a common code. Just as geometers subjected a circle in the sand and the disc of the sun to the same laws, and as physicists subjected the sway of a pendulum and the orbits of the planets to the same laws, Claude Shannon made our world possible by getting at the essence of information. It is a puzzle of his life that someone so skilled at abstracting his way past the tangible world was also so gifted at manipulating it. Shannon was a born tinkerer: a telegraph line rigged from a barbed-wire fence, a makeshift barn elevator, and a private backyard trolley tell the story of his small-town Michigan childhood. And it was as an especially advanced sort of tinkerer that he caught the eye of Vannevar Bush--soon to become the most powerful scientist in America and Shannon's most influential mentor--who brought him to MIT and charged him with the upkeep of the differential analyzer, an analog computer the size of a room, " a fearsome thing of shafts, gears, strings, and wheels rolling on disks" that happened to be the most advanced thinking machine of its day. Shannon's study of the electrical switches directing the guts of that mechanical behemoth led him to an insight at the foundation of our digital age: that switches could do far more than control the flow of electricity through circuits--that they could be used to evaluate any logical statement we could think of, could even appear to "decide." A series of binary choices--on/off, true/false, 1/0--could, in principle, perform a passable imitation of a brain. That leap, as Walter Isaacson put it, " became the basic concept underlying all digital computers." It was Shannon's first great feat of abstraction. He was only twenty-one. A career that launched with " possibly the most important, and also the most famous, master's thesis of the century" brought him into contact and collaboration with thinkers like Bush, Alan Turing, and John von Neumann: all, like Shannon, founders of our era. It brought him into often-reluctant cooperation with the American defense establishment and into arcane work on cryptography, computer-controlled gunnery, and the encrypted transatlantic phone line that connected Roosevelt and Churchill in the midst of world war. And it brought him to Bell Labs, an industrial R&D operation that considered itself less an arm of the phone company than a home for " the operation of genius." " People did very well at Bell Labs," said one of Shannon's colleagues, "when they did what others thought was impossible." Shannon's choice of the impossible was, he wrote, " an analysis of some of the fundamental properties of general systems for the transmission of intelligence, including telephony, radio, television, telegraphy, etc."--systems that, from a mathematical perspective, appeared to have nothing essential in common until Shannon proved that they had everything essential in common. It would be his second, and greatest, feat of abstraction. Before the publication of his "Mathematical Theory of Communication," scientists could track the movement of electrons in a wire, but the possibility that the very idea they stood for could be measured and manipulated just as objectively would have to wait until it was proved by Shannon. It was summed up in his recognition that all information, no matter the source, the sender, the recipient, or the meaning, could be efficiently represented by a sequence of bits: information's fundamental unit. Before the "Mathematical Theory of Communication," a century of common sense and engineering trial and error said that noise--the physical world's tax on our messages--had to be lived with. And yet Shannon proved that noise could be defeated, that information sent from Point A could be received with perfection at Point B, not just often, but essentially always. He gave engineers the conceptual tools to digitize information and send it flawlessly (or, to be precise, with an arbitrarily small amount of error), a result considered hopelessly utopian up until the moment Shannon proved it was not. Another engineer marveled, " How he got that insight, how he even came to believe such a thing, I don't know." That insight is embedded in the circuits of our phones, our computers, our satellite TVs, our space probes still tethered to the earth with thin cords of 0's and 1's. In 1990, the Voyager 1 probe turned its camera back on Earth from the edge of the solar system, snapped a picture of our planetary home reduced in size to less than a single pixel--to what Carl Sagan called " a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam"--and transmitted that picture across four billion miles of void. Claude Shannon did not write the code that protected that image from error and distortion, but, some four decades earlier, he had proved that such a code must exist. And so it did. It is part of his legacy; and so is the endless flow of digital information on which the Internet depends, and so is the information omnivory by which we define ourselves as modern. By his early thirties, he was one of the brightest stars of American science, with the media attention and prestigious awards to prove it. Yet, at the height of his brief fame, when his information theory had become the buzz-phrase to explain everything from geology to politics to music, Shannon published a four-paragraph article kindly urging the rest of the world to vacate his " bandwagon." Impatient with all but the most gifted, he still knew very little of ambition, or ego, or avarice, or any of the other unsightly drivers of accomplishment. His best ideas waited years for publication, and his interest drifted across problems on a private channel of its own. Having completed his pathbreaking work by the age of thirty-two, he might have spent his remaining decades as a scientific celebrity, a public face of innovation: another Bertrand Russell, or Albert Einstein, or Richard Feynman, or Steve Jobs. Instead, he spent them tinkering. An electronic, maze-solving mouse named Theseus. An Erector Set turtle that walked his house. The first plan for a chess-playing computer, a distant ancestor of IBM's Deep Blue. The first-ever wearable computer. A calculator that operated in Roman numerals, code-named THROBAC ("Thrifty Roman-Numeral Backward-Looking Computer"). A fleet of customized unicycles. Years devoted to the scientific study of juggling. And, of course, the Ultimate Machine: a box and a switch, which, when flipped on, produced a whirring of gears and a mechanical hand that emerged from the box, flipped the switch off, and disappeared again. Claude Shannon was self-effacing in much the same way. Rarely has a thinker who devoted his life to the study of communication been so uncommunicative. Seen in profile, he almost vanished: a gaunt stick of a man, and a man almost entirely written out of a history defined by self-promoters. His was a life spent in the pursuit of curious, serious play; he was that rare scientific genius who was just as content rigging up a juggling robot or a flamethrowing trumpet as he was pioneering digital circuits. He worked with levity and played with gravity; he never acknowledged a distinction between the two. His genius lay above all in the quality of the puzzles he set for himself. And the marks of his playful mind--the mind that wondered how a box of electric switches could mimic a brain, and the mind that asked why no one ever decides to say "XFOML RXKHRJFFJUJ"--are imprinted on all of his deepest insights. Maybe it is too much to presume that the character of an age bears some stamp of the character of its founders; but it would be pleasant to think that so much of what is essential to ours was conceived in the spirit of play. Excerpted from A Mind at Play: How Claude Shannon Invented the Information Age by Jimmy Soni, Rob Goodman All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.