Abstract
Claude Shannon's 1948 paper 'A Mathematical Theory of Communication' provided the essential foundation for the digital/information revolution that enables these very pixels to glow in meaningful patterns and permeates nearly every aspect of modern life. Information Theory, born fully grown from this paper, has been applied and mis-applied to a multitude of disciplines in the last 70-odd years, from quantum physics to psychology. Shannon himself famously decried those jumping on the 'scientific bandwagon' of Information Theory without sufficient mathematical rigour. Nevertheless, having a brief personal connection to Dr Shannon (and being extremely grateful for it), I will take the liberty of colouring some of my experience with computer network music with less-than-rigorous insights gained from his work.
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CITATION STYLE
Stone, P. (2021). Non-Mathematical Musings on Information Theory and Networked Musical Practice. Organised Sound, 26(3), 327–332. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1355771821000418
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