Karl Steinbuch

Karl Steinbuch (June 15, 1917 in Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt - June 4, 2005 in Ettlingen) was a German computer scientist, cyberneticist, and electrical engineer. He is one of the pioneers of the German computer science, as well as with his Lernmatrix an early pioneer of artificial neural networks. Steinbuch also wrote about the societal implications of modern media.

Biography
Steinbuch studied at the University of Stuttgart and in 1944 he received his Phd in physics. In 1948 Steinbuch joined the Standard Elektrik Lorenz (SEL, part of the ITT group) in Stuttgart as a computer design engineer and later as a director of R&D, filing more than 70 patents. There Steinbuch completed the first European fully transistorized computer ER 56, marketed by SEL. In 1958 he became professor and director of the institute of technology for information processing (ITIV) of the University of Karlsruhe, where he retired in 1980.

In 1967 by his indictment-like bestselling book, and later by other bestselling books, he tried to influence the German education policy. Together with books from colleagues like Jean Ziegler from Switzerland, Eric J. Hobsbawm from UK, and John Naisbitt his books predicted the coming education disaster of the emerging civic lobby society.

Karl Steinbuch coined the term Informatik, the German word for Computer Science, in 1957.

Awards:
 * Wilhelm-Boelsche award - medal in Gold
 * German non-fiction book award
 * Gold medal award of the XXI. International Congresses on Aerospace Medicine
 * Konrad Adenauer award of science
 * Jakob Fugger award medal
 * Medal of merit of the state of Baden-Wuerttemberg
 * member, German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina
 * member, International Academy of Science.
 * grants from a state government grants program, named „Karl-Steinbuch-Stipendium“

Books
Karl Steinbuch has written several books and articles. A selection:
 * 1957 Informatik: Automatische Informationsverarbeitung ("Informatics: automatic information processing").
 * 1963 Learning matrices and their applications (together with U. A. W. Piske)
 * 1965 A critical comparison of two kinds of adaptive classification networks (together with Bernard Widrow)
 * 1966 (1969): Die informierte Gesellschaft. Geschichte und Zukunft der Nachrichtentechnik (The informed society. History and Future of telecommunications)
 * 1989: Die desinformierte Gesellschaft (The disinformed society)
 * 1968: Falsch programmiert. Über das Versagen unserer Gesellschaft in der Gegenwart und vor der Zukunft und was eigentlich geschehen müßte. (as a bestseller listet in: DER SPIEGEL) (Programmed falsely. About our society's failure in the present and with respect to the future and what should be done.)
 * 1969: Programm 2000. (as a bestseller listet in: DER SPIEGEL)
 * 1971: Automat und Mensch. Auf dem Weg zu einer kybernetischen Anthropologie (Machine and Man. On the way to a cybernetic anthropology; 4th revised edition)
 * 1971: Mensch Technik Zukunft. Probleme von Morgen (German non-fiction book award) (Man Technology Future. Problems of Tomorrow)
 * 1973: Kurskorrektur (Correcting the Course)
 * 1978: Maßlos informiert. Die Enteignung des Denkens (Excessively informed. The Deprivation of Thinking)
 * 1984: Unsere manipulierte Demokratie. Müssen wir mit der linken Lüge leben? (Our Thought-controlled Democracy. Do we have to live with the leftist lie?)