- Lerner, Alexander Yakob
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▪ 2005Aleksandr Yakovlevich LernerSoviet mathematician (b. Sept. 7, 1913, Vinnytsya, Ukraine—d. April 5, 2004, Rehovot, Israel), was a pioneer in cybernetics—the study of control and communication applied to humans, animals, electronic devices, and organizations. He was the author of scores of scientific papers and a dozen books, notably Nachala kibernetiki (1967; Fundamentals of Cybernetics, 1972), which remained a standard comparison of electronic and biological control systems. As one of the first “refuseniks” who sought permission to emigrate and move to Israel, Lerner was fired (1971) from his post as head of the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences' department of large systems control theory and spent 17 years seeking an exit visa. After finally being allowed to leave the U.S.S.R. in January 1988, he joined the mathematics faculty at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, where he worked on the development of an artificial heart.
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Universalium. 2010.