This article may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject, potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral. (June 2024) |
Humberto Maturana | |
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Born | |
Died | May 6, 2021 Santiago, Chile | (aged 92)
Alma mater | University of Chile; University College London; Harvard University |
Awards | National Prize for Natural Sciences |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Biology, philosophy |
Institutions | University of Chile; Instituto de Formación Matríztica |
Thesis | The fine structure of the optic nerve and tectum of anurans; an electron microscope study (1959) |
Doctoral advisor | George B. Chapman |
Doctoral students | Rafael E. Núñez Francisco Varela |
Humberto Maturana Romesín (September 14, 1928 – May 6, 2021) was a Chilean biologist and philosopher. Many consider him a member of a group of second-order cybernetics theoreticians such as Heinz von Foerster, Gordon Pask, Herbert Brün and Ernst von Glasersfeld, but in fact he was a biologist, scientist.
Maturana, along with Francisco Varela and Ricardo B. Uribe, was known for creating the term "autopoiesis" about the self-generating, self-maintaining structure in living systems, and concepts such as structural determinism and structural coupling.[1] His work was influential in many fields, mainly the field of systems thinking and cybernetics. Overall, his work is concerned with the biology of cognition.[2] Maturana (2002) insisted that autopoiesis exists only in the molecular domain, and he did not agree with the extension into sociology and other fields:
The molecular domain is the only domain of entities that through their interactions give rise to an open ended diversity of entities (with different dynamic architectures) of the same kind in a dynamic that can give rise to an open ended diversity of recursive processes that in their turn give rise to the composition of an open ended diversity of singular dynamic entities.[3]