Title :
Control engineering in the former USSR. Some ideological aspects of the early years
Author_Institution :
Fac. of Technol., Open Univ., Milton Keynes, UK
fDate :
2/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
2 case studies; the Shchipanov Affair of 1940-41, and the work of Andronov in the late 1940s. The author attempts to identify and elucidate some of the socio-political complexities that lie behind theoretical developments in control engineering in the former Soviet Union. The ideological background to scientific research was a crucial element in the 1930s and 1940s: it served to severely hinder early work at the Institute of Automation and Remote Control-yet it might be argued that it also promoted Andronov´s seminal contributions both to the development of nonlinear theory and to the history of his subject. The author contends that a study of the history of technology is of great value to students in exposing them to the complexities and “messiness”4 of real-world engineering. The history of Soviet control engineering is a case in point, and should remind us to be extremely wary of simplistic, linear accounts of the development, not only of control engineering, but of all technological disciplines
Keywords :
control engineering; philosophical aspects; politics; A.A. Andronov; G.V. Shchipanov; Shchipanov Affair; control engineering; former USSR; ideological aspects; nonlinear theory; socio-political complexities; Automatic control; Automation; Control engineering; Control systems; Dictionaries; History; Research and development;
Journal_Title :
Control Systems, IEEE