I'm trying to find when the term "computer science" came into general use. The term "software" seems to be quite accurately dated as appearing in 1960 in several contemporary publications, but I have found nothing similar for computer science. Martin - Martin Campbell-Kelly, Dept of Computer Science University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, U.K. voice: +44 24 7652 3193 fax: +44 24 7657 3024 email: <mailto:M.Campbell-Kelly@warwick.ac.uk> M.Campbell-Kelly@warwick.ac.uk
Here is a bit from some research I did a while back to answer a related question. Perhaps this may be of help. Sorry for the wonky cut-and-paste. -- Ian Per an account by Donald Knuth[1]<file:///C:/Users/iank/Downloads/Emergence%20of%20CS%20-%201-3-13.doc#_ftn1>, in 1961 George Forsythe at Stanford University was using that term and promoting such a department at Stanford. Louis Fein had evidently been speaking of the concept as early as 1957[2]<file:///C:/Users/iank/Downloads/Emergence%20of%20CS%20-%201-3-13.doc#_ftn2>but Forsythe brought it to public view, in Knuth’s opinion. In an oral history with Albert Bowker of Stanford[3]<file:///C:/Users/iank/Downloads/Emergence%20of%20CS%20-%201-3-13.doc#_ftn3>he relates discussions in 1956 about the formation of a computer science program. ------------------------------ [1]<file:///C:/Users/iank/Downloads/Emergence%20of%20CS%20-%201-3-13.doc#_ftnref1> Donald E. Knuth. 1972. George Forsythe and the development of computer science. *Commun. ACM* 15, 8 (August 1972), 721-726. [2]<file:///C:/Users/iank/Downloads/Emergence%20of%20CS%20-%201-3-13.doc#_ftnref2>Ibid. p. 722. [3]<file:///C:/Users/iank/Downloads/Emergence%20of%20CS%20-%201-3-13.doc#_ftnref3> Albert H. Bowker, OH 6. Oral history interview by Pamela McCorduck, 21 May 1979, Berkeley, Calif. Charles Babbage Institute, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. http://purl.umn.edu/107140 On Fri, Jun 28, 2013 at 10:59 AM, Martin Campbell-Kelly < m.campbell-kelly@warwick.ac.uk> wrote:
I’m trying to find when the term “computer science” came into general use. The term “software” seems to be quite accurately dated as appearing in 1960 in several contemporary publications, but I have found nothing similar for computer science.****
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Martin Campbell-Kelly, Dept of Computer Science University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, U.K. voice: +44 24 7652 3193 fax: +44 24 7657 3024 email: M.Campbell-Kelly@warwick.ac.uk ****
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-- Ian S. King, MSCS ('06, Washington) Ph.D. Student The Information School University of Washington "Be yourself, everyone else is already taken." - Oscar Wilde
Martin, That's an excellent question; I am also exploring this area. Most people seem to date the term to Louis Fein's 1959 article "The Role of the University in Computers, Data Processing, and Related Fields," which uses the plural "computer sciences." The term is also used in Philip Morse's 1960 "Report on a Conference of University Computing Center Directors," which describes actual computer science programs at universities. By 1962 you start to see advertisements using the term, which may indicate broad acceptance. For example: 1962 ad in American Scientist by Research Analysis Corporation (Bethesda, MD): “New Directions in Computer Science.” ... “RAC scientists, engineers, and computer analysts ... reach well beyond the existing body of knowledge in computer science. The results have been twofold—new capabilities to predict and control, and new contributions to computer science and science in general.” RAC “currently offers career appointments to physicists, engineers, mathematicians, economists, and computer scientists, with graduate degrees.” This mainly applies to the US. I think "information science" or "informatics" may have been more common in Europe. References: Fein, Louis. "The Role of the University in Computers, Data Processing, and Related Fields." Communications of the ACM 2, no. 9 (1959): 7-14. Morse, Philip M. . "Report on a Conference of University Computing Center Directors (June 2-4 1960)." Commun. ACM 3, no. 10 (1960): 519-21. Janet Dr. Janet Abbate Associate Professor Science & Technology in Society Virginia Tech www.sts.vt.edu/ncr www.linkedin.com/groups/STS-Virginia-Tech-4565055 www.facebook.com/VirginiaTechSTS On Jun 28, 2013, at 1:59 43PM, Martin Campbell-Kelly wrote:
I’m trying to find when the term “computer science” came into general use. The term “software” seems to be quite accurately dated as appearing in 1960 in several contemporary publications, but I have found nothing similar for computer science.
Martin
— Martin Campbell-Kelly, Dept of Computer Science University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, U.K. voice: +44 24 7652 3193 fax: +44 24 7657 3024 email: M.Campbell-Kelly@warwick.ac.uk
_______________________________________________ This email is relayed from members@sigcis.org, the email discussion list of SHOT SIGCIS. The list archives are athttp://sigcis.org/pipermail/members/ and you can change your subscription options at http://sigcis.org/mailman/listinfo/members
I wrote about this years ago, in the Annals of the History of Computing, vol. 10/4 (1989), pp. 257-275. Paul E. Ceruzzi Chair, Division of Space History National Air & Space Museum MRC 311; PO Box 37012 Washington, DC 20013-7012 202-633-2414 <http://www.nasm.si.edu/staffDetail.cfm?staffID=24> -----Original Message----- From: members-bounces@sigcis.org [mailto:members-bounces@sigcis.org] On Behalf Of Janet Abbate Sent: Friday, June 28, 2013 2:41 PM To: Martin Campbell-Kelly Cc: members@sigcis.org; David Brailsford Subject: Re: [SIGCIS-Members] Origin of "Computer Science" Martin, That's an excellent question; I am also exploring this area. Most people seem to date the term to Louis Fein's 1959 article "The Role of the University in Computers, Data Processing, and Related Fields," which uses the plural "computer sciences." The term is also used in Philip Morse's 1960 "Report on a Conference of University Computing Center Directors," which describes actual computer science programs at universities. By 1962 you start to see advertisements using the term, which may indicate broad acceptance. For example: 1962 ad in American Scientist by Research Analysis Corporation (Bethesda, MD): "New Directions in Computer Science." ... "RAC scientists, engineers, and computer analysts ... reach well beyond the existing body of knowledge in computer science. The results have been twofold-new capabilities to predict and control, and new contributions to computer science and science in general." RAC "currently offers career appointments to physicists, engineers, mathematicians, economists, and computer scientists, with graduate degrees." This mainly applies to the US. I think "information science" or "informatics" may have been more common in Europe. References: Fein, Louis. "The Role of the University in Computers, Data Processing, and Related Fields." Communications of the ACM 2, no. 9 (1959): 7-14. Morse, Philip M. . "Report on a Conference of University Computing Center Directors (June 2-4 1960)." Commun. ACM 3, no. 10 (1960): 519-21. Janet Dr. Janet Abbate Associate Professor Science & Technology in Society Virginia Tech www.sts.vt.edu/ncr www.linkedin.com/groups/STS-Virginia-Tech-4565055 www.facebook.com/VirginiaTechSTS
Martin, For continental Europe, I would consider two meetings as major steps toward a "Computer Science awareness": - The founding conference of IFIP at Unesco (Paris, 1959), which offered a vast overview on novel research themes (languages, etc.), beyond the use of computers as tools for numerical analysis. The proceedings can be found online to check whether the very term “computer science” was used. - The meeting hosted in October 1961 at IBM’s European education center (Blaricum, Netherlands) on the Relationship Between Non- numerical Programming and the Theory of Formal Systems. John McCarthy presented his manifesto, “A Basis for a Mathematical Theory of Computation”, proclaiming the foundation of a new science of computation based on numerical analysis, recursive function theory and automata theory. (I wrote something about it in http://www.computing-conference.ugent.be/file/12) The quest for a term equivalent to "Computer Science" before 1960 is revealed by neologisms: "Informatik" in Germany and "Automatique des informations" in France, both in 1957 – partly to distinguish computing from cybernetics. Best Pierre Mounier-Kuhn PS: I would have the same query for the term "Discrete Mathematics"… The journal Discrete Mathematics was established in 1971, yet did not detail the motivations for its title. Le 28 juin 13 à 20:40, Janet Abbate a écrit :
Martin,
That's an excellent question; I am also exploring this area. Most people seem to date the term to Louis Fein's 1959 article "The Role of the University in Computers, Data Processing, and Related Fields," which uses the plural "computer sciences." The term is also used in Philip Morse's 1960 "Report on a Conference of University Computing Center Directors," which describes actual computer science programs at universities. By 1962 you start to see advertisements using the term, which may indicate broad acceptance. For example:
1962 ad in American Scientist by Research Analysis Corporation (Bethesda, MD): “New Directions in Computer Science.” ... “RAC scientists, engineers, and computer analysts ... reach well beyond the existing body of knowledge in computer science. The results have been twofold—new capabilities to predict and control, and new contributions to computer science and science in general.” RAC “currently offers career appointments to physicists, engineers, mathematicians, economists, and computer scientists, with graduate degrees.”
This mainly applies to the US. I think "information science" or "informatics" may have been more common in Europe.
References: Fein, Louis. "The Role of the University in Computers, Data Processing, and Related Fields." Communications of the ACM 2, no. 9 (1959): 7-14. Morse, Philip M. . "Report on a Conference of University Computing Center Directors (June 2-4 1960)." Commun. ACM 3, no. 10 (1960): 519-21.
Janet
Dr. Janet Abbate Associate Professor Science & Technology in Society Virginia Tech www.sts.vt.edu/ncr www.linkedin.com/groups/STS-Virginia-Tech-4565055 www.facebook.com/VirginiaTechSTS
On Jun 28, 2013, at 1:59 43PM, Martin Campbell-Kelly wrote:
I’m trying to find when the term “computer science” came into general use. The term “software” seems to be quite accurately dated as appearing in 1960 in several contemporary publications, but I have found nothing similar for computer science.
Martin
— Martin Campbell-Kelly, Dept of Computer Science University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, U.K. voice: +44 24 7652 3193 fax: +44 24 7657 3024 email: M.Campbell-Kelly@warwick.ac.uk
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Dear Friends, Thanks so much for your responses to my query. My conclusion is that one cannot usefully point to a unique person or place where the term 'computer science' was coined (unlike John Tukey's invention of "bit" in 1947), but that it was a widely accepted usage by 1961. Interestingly, the first department with that name in the UK was at Manchester University in 1965. This confirms my long-held hypothesis that at that time the UK followed US trends delayed by 3 or 4 years. Regards, Martin - Martin Campbell-Kelly, Dept of Computer Science University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, U.K. voice: +44 24 7652 3193 fax: +44 24 7657 3024 email: M.Campbell-Kelly@warwick.ac.uk
Dear Martin I'm afraid you are not right (very rare in my experience!). According to Birkbeck's Annual Report the College's department of Numerical Automation was renamed as the Department of Computer Science at the start of the 1963/4 Academic Session. Good wishes Roger Johnson -----Original Message----- From: members-bounces@sigcis.org [mailto:members-bounces@sigcis.org] On Behalf Of Martin Campbell-Kelly Sent: 01 July 2013 15:44 To: members@sigcis.org Cc: 'David Brailsford' Subject: Re: [SIGCIS-Members] Origin of "Computer Science" Dear Friends, Thanks so much for your responses to my query. My conclusion is that one cannot usefully point to a unique person or place where the term 'computer science' was coined (unlike John Tukey's invention of "bit" in 1947), but that it was a widely accepted usage by 1961. Interestingly, the first department with that name in the UK was at Manchester University in 1965. This confirms my long-held hypothesis that at that time the UK followed US trends delayed by 3 or 4 years. Regards, Martin - Martin Campbell-Kelly, Dept of Computer Science University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, U.K. voice: +44 24 7652 3193 fax: +44 24 7657 3024 email: M.Campbell-Kelly@warwick.ac.uk _______________________________________________ This email is relayed from members@sigcis.org, the email discussion list of SHOT SIGCIS. The list archives are at http://sigcis.org/pipermail/members/ and you can change your subscription options at http://sigcis.org/mailman/listinfo/members
Thank you Roger. I stand corrected! - Martin Campbell-Kelly, Dept of Computer Science University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, U.K. voice: +44 24 7652 3193 fax: +44 24 7657 3024 email: M.Campbell-Kelly@warwick.ac.uk -----Original Message----- From: Roger Johnson [mailto:rgj@dcs.bbk.ac.uk] Sent: 02 July 2013 14:02 To: Martin Campbell-Kelly; members@sigcis.org Cc: 'David Brailsford' Subject: RE: [SIGCIS-Members] Origin of "Computer Science" Dear Martin I'm afraid you are not right (very rare in my experience!). According to Birkbeck's Annual Report the College's department of Numerical Automation was renamed as the Department of Computer Science at the start of the 1963/4 Academic Session. Good wishes Roger Johnson -----Original Message----- From: members-bounces@sigcis.org [mailto:members-bounces@sigcis.org] On Behalf Of Martin Campbell-Kelly Sent: 01 July 2013 15:44 To: members@sigcis.org Cc: 'David Brailsford' Subject: Re: [SIGCIS-Members] Origin of "Computer Science" Dear Friends, Thanks so much for your responses to my query. My conclusion is that one cannot usefully point to a unique person or place where the term 'computer science' was coined (unlike John Tukey's invention of "bit" in 1947), but that it was a widely accepted usage by 1961. Interestingly, the first department with that name in the UK was at Manchester University in 1965. This confirms my long-held hypothesis that at that time the UK followed US trends delayed by 3 or 4 years. Regards, Martin - Martin Campbell-Kelly, Dept of Computer Science University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, U.K. voice: +44 24 7652 3193 fax: +44 24 7657 3024 email: M.Campbell-Kelly@warwick.ac.uk _______________________________________________ This email is relayed from members@sigcis.org, the email discussion list of SHOT SIGCIS. The list archives are at http://sigcis.org/pipermail/members/ and you can change your subscription options at http://sigcis.org/mailman/listinfo/members
The Computer History Museum some years back credited Fred Brooks' inaugural program at University of North Carolina in 1964. This was part of the 1990 Computer Trivia Bowl, whether it is rue or not, I cannot say Best, chuck On Jun 28, 2013, at 10:59 AM, Martin Campbell-Kelly <m.campbell-kelly@WARWICK.AC.UK> wrote:
I’m trying to find when the term “computer science” came into general use. The term “software” seems to be quite accurately dated as appearing in 1960 in several contemporary publications, but I have found nothing similar for computer science.
Martin
— Martin Campbell-Kelly, Dept of Computer Science University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, U.K. voice: +44 24 7652 3193 fax: +44 24 7657 3024 email: M.Campbell-Kelly@warwick.ac.uk
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participants (7)
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Ceruzzi, Paul -
Chuck House -
Ian S. King -
Janet Abbate -
Martin Campbell-Kelly -
Pierre Mounier -
Roger Johnson