Everything about Hal Abelson totally explained
Harold (Hal) Abelson is the
Class of 1922 Professor of
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at
MIT, and a fellow of the
IEEE. He holds an
A.B. degree from
Princeton University and a
Ph.D. degree in mathematics from MIT. In 1992, Abelson was designated as one of MIT's six inaugural MacVicar Faculty Fellows, in recognition of his significant and sustained contributions to teaching and undergraduate education. Abelson was recipient in 1992 of the Bose Award (MIT's School of Engineering teaching award). Abelson is also the winner of the 1995
Taylor L. Booth Education Award given by
IEEE Computer Society, cited for his continued contributions to the pedagogy and teaching of introductory computer science.
Abelson has a longstanding interest in using computation as a conceptual framework in teaching. He directed the first implementation of
LOGO for the
Apple II, which made the language widely available on personal computers beginning in 1981; and published a widely selling book on LOGO in 1982. His book
Turtle Geometry, written with
Andrea diSessa in 1981, presented a computational approach to geometry has been cited as "the first step in a revolutionary change in the entire teaching/learning process."
Together with
Gerald Jay Sussman, Abelson developed MIT's introductory computer science subject,
Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs, a subject organized around the notion that a computer language is primarily a formal medium for expressing ideas about methodology, rather than just a way to get a computer to perform operations. This work, through Abelson and Sussman's popular eponymous computer science
textbook, videotapes of their lectures, and the availability on personal computers of the
Scheme dialect of
Lisp (used in teaching the course), has had a world-wide impact on university computer-science education.
Abelson and Sussman also have been an important part of the
Free Software Movement, including serving on the Board of Directors of the
Free Software Foundation,
(External Link
) and releasing
MIT/GNU Scheme as
free software even before the Free Software Foundation existed.
Abelson and Sussman also cooperate in codirecting the MIT Project on Mathematics and Computation, a project of the
MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (previously a joint project of the
AI Lab and
LCS, CSAIL's components). The goal of the project is to create better computational tools for scientists and engineers. But even with powerful numerical computers, exploring complex physical systems still requires substantial human effort and human judgement to prepare simulations and to interpret numerical results. Together with their students, Abelson and Sussman are combining techniques from
numerical computing, symbolic
algebra, and
heuristic programming to develop programs that not only perform massive numerical computations, but that also interpret these computations and "discuss" the results in qualitative terms. Programs such as these could form the basis for intelligent scientific instruments that monitor physical systems based upon high-level behavioral descriptions. More generally, they could lead to a new generation of computational tools that can autonomously explore complex physical systems, and which will play an important part in the future practice of science and engineering. At the same time, these programs incorporate computational formulations of scientific knowledge that can form the foundations of better ways to teach science and engineering.
Trivia
- Richard Stallman reportedly enjoys sleeping on Dr. Abelson's couch.
- Dr. Abelson is known to have been involved in the publishing of Andrew Huang's Hacking the Xbox and Keith Winstein's seven line Perl DeCSS script (known as qrpff), as well as LAMP, MIT's campus wide cable music distribution system.
- Hal Abelson is credited with the following quip (though he attributes it to his Princeton roommate, Jeff Goll) :
"If I've not seen as far as others, it's because giants were standing on my shoulders". It is a parody of a reverse statement first attributed to the philosopher Bernard of Chartres but often credited to the scientist Sir Isaac Newton.
- The MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW) project was spearheaded by Hal Abelson and other MIT Faculty.
Further Information
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