Michael Roth (cyberneticist)
Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at :de:Michael Roth ; see its history for attribution.
Michael Roth was a German engineer and professor of automation, specializing in microprocessor technology, computer science and sociology as well as philosophy of science. He was one of the pioneers in the area of computer engineering in Germany.
Life
Roth was born in Lomnička, and originally completed his vocational training as a mechanic for agricultural machinery and as a programmer. He started his university studies in 1957 at the then Hochschule fuer Elektrotechnik Ilmenau in electrical engineering, with a specialization in control engineering under Karl Reinisch. He received his academic degree as a Diplom-Ingenieur in 1963. After that, he worked at the institute for computer engineering as a scientific assistant. He successfully completed this work in 1967 earning a Doctorate degree as a Doktoringenieur. His dissertation was in the domain of computer engineering, focussing on the design of hybrid computers. This constituted an essential foundation for his later research. Subsequently, he finished additional studies at the Moscow Power Engineering Institute in 1967/68.Roth was appointed Associate Professor at the TH Ilmenau in 1970, in the department Technical and Biomedical Cybernetics. In cooperation with expert committees from the Chamber of Technology and the electronics industry of Thuringia, he developed the new special field of microcomputer technology, which he also introduced as an independent subject, publishing specialized reference books in several editions.
Roth stimulated the launch of this technology not only through his research and development work, but also through his involvement in continuous education for this industrial technology as well as through the publication of specialized books. As a researcher, he focused on questions concerning the development of components and tools for intelligent automation systems.
In 1978, he was appointed Professor for Automation and Technical Cybernetics at the TH Ilmenau. This appointment spoke highly of his knowledge and his wealth of experience. His lectures and his textbooks extended the training of engineers with degrees in microprocessor technology – at the time, microprocessor technology was a rare specialization in the German-speaking area.
His cooperation with other professors – one of them being in the data centre with its director, Reinhold Schönefeld – led to extensive industry-level research and internship opportunities in microprocessor technology with the TH Ilmenau. These opportunities were considered unique when compared to other university facilities in the German-speaking area. Roth thus contributed to establishing research and development at the department of Technical and Biomedical Cybernetics, and made it thrive. In parallel, he worked on the technology transfer to the surrounding computer businesses.
During his professional activities, Roth developed various microcontroller applications and implementations. Through this, he gained experience with programming languages, the usage of the accompanying development tools as well as the hardware and software components. Systems for visualization were used to efficiently communicate between man and machine. Further work on real-life applications and objects for demonstration purposes extended his knowledge and experience in the area of programming. He also gained a sound skill level in the area of data communication and the related subdomains.
By no means had Roth ever considered this field as being technologically finalized. As such, he continuously worked in close contact with industry and research partners to scientifically advance future development. Through his committee work in the Informatics Society of the GDR and specific publications of books and magazines he contributed to an increased appreciation of the new field of microprocessor technology in East Germany.
Furthermore, since his early years, Roth had been interested in a higher-level view of the evolution of science. In 1986, he completed his Habilitation at the TU Dresden in the field of the philosophy of science.
Scientific roles
Roth started as the research area lead of the aforementioned department TBK; he then became its director. On the basis of his specialized research work, he became a co-founder of the specialized studies „Computer engineering“. In addition to that, he was the founder of the postgraduate degree of an engineer with specialization „Microprocessor technology“.Roth was the founder and editor of the magazine „Mikroprozessortechnik“ at the East German publishing company Verlag Technik Berlin. In an evening talk at a technical committee conference of the Chamber of Technology in Angelroda in April 1982, he described the tedious processes for founding this magazine under the conditions in the GDR: For 15 years he made efforts until a small number of copies of „Mikroprozessortechnik“ was allowed to be released. It was forbidden to use the word „Informatik“, as Günter Mittag, member of the Politbüro of the SED considered this a term of West German ideology. The argument of a limited quota of paper available to the publisher had to be overcome as well as the criticism that the publishing company VEB Verlag Technik had not published a new magazine for 28 years.
His work as co-founder of the magazine Ethics and Social Sciences at the West German publishing company Westdeutscher Verlag illustrates his ability for unconventional thinking and his interest in questions concerning the future.
For many years, Roth was the chair of the Thuringia subdivision of the Verband Hochschule und Wissenschaft in the German Civil Service Federation, as well as a member of the federal board of the VHW in Bonn. This professional association of professors, university lecturers and scientific assistants at universities and institutes of higher education had been founded in November 1990 in Thuringia to engage employees and civil servants, where the VHW as part of the German Civil Service Federation also has the right of hearing in legislative procedures and the collective bargaining law.
Roth contributed as an expert in the advisory panel „Delphi-Prognose“ of the Fraunhofer Society.
Fields
Michael Roth worked in a wide variety of fields:- Automation Technology
- Technical Cybernetics
- Computer Engineering
- Computer Science and Sociology
- Information Society
- Knowledge Economy
- Evolution of Society as well as
- Universities and higher education institutions.
Literature
- Heinrich Kindler: Aufgabensammlung zur Regelungstechnik. Verlag Technik Berlin, Oldenbourg-Verlag München, Wien, 1964.
- Karl Reinisch: Kybernetische Grundlagen und Beschreibung kontinuierlicher Systeme. Verlag Technik Berlin 1974.
- Horst Völz: Elektronik. Grundlagen, Prinzipien, Zusammenhänge. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1974, 2. Auflage 1979, 1002 S.
- Wolf Martin: Mikrocomputer in der Prozessdatenverarbeitung. Aufbau und Einsatz der Mikrocomputer zur Überwachung, Steuerung und Regelung. Carl Hanser Verlag, München, Wien 1977,.
- Heinz Töpfer, Werner Kriesel: Funktionseinheiten der Automatisierungstechnik – elektrisch, pneumatisch, hydraulisch. Verlag Technik, Berlin und VDI-Verlag, Düsseldorf 1977, 5. Auflage 1988,.
- Albert Jugel: Mikroprozessorsysteme. Verlag Technik, Berlin 1978.
- Wolfgang Schwarz, Gernot Meyer, Dietrich Eckhardt: Mikrorechner. Wirkungsweise, Programmierung, Applikation. Verlag Technik, Berlin 1980, 2. Auflage 1981.
- Wolfgang Fritzsch: Prozessrechentechnik. Automatisierte Systeme mit Prozess- und Mikroprozessrechnern. Verlag Technik, Berlin 1981, 2.Auflage 1983, 3. Auflage 1986.
- Klaus Kabitzsch: Mikrorechner in der Automatisierungspraxis. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1987,.
- Manfred Thoma: Heinz Töpfer 60 Jahre. In: Automatisierungstechnik, München. Jg. 38, Nr. 7, 1990, S. 245–246.
- Peter Neumann u. a.: SPS-Standard: IEC 1131 : Programmierung in verteilten Automatisierungssystemen. Oldenbourg-Industrieverlag, München; Wien 1995, 2. Auflage 1998, 3. Auflage 2000,.
- Werner Kriesel, Hans Rohr, Andreas Koch: Geschichte und Zukunft der Mess- und Automatisierungstechnik. VDI-Verlag, Düsseldorf 1995,.
- Lothar Starke: Vom Hydraulischen Regler zum Prozessleitsystem. Die Erfolgsgeschichte der Askania-Werke Berlin und der Geräte- und Regler-Werke Teltow. 140 Jahre Industriegeschichte, Tradition und Zukunft. Berliner Wissenschafts-Verlag, Berlin 2009,.
- Hans-Joachim Zander, Georg Bretthauer: Prof. Heinz Töpfer zum 80. Geburtstag. In: Automatisierungstechnik, München. Jg. 58, Nr. 7, 2010, S. 413–415.
- Wolfgang Weller: Automatisierungstechnik im Wandel der Zeit – Entwicklungsgeschichte eines faszinierenden Fachgebiets. Verlag epubli GmbH Berlin, 2013, sowie als E-Book.
- Hans-Joachim Zander: Steuerung ereignisdiskreter Prozesse. Neuartige Methoden zur Prozessbeschreibung und zum Entwurf von Steuerungsalgorithmen. Springer Vieweg Verlag, Wiesbaden 2015,, E-Book-.
- Tilo Heimbold: Einführung in die Automatisierungstechnik. Automatisierungssysteme, Komponenten, Projektierung und Planung. Fachbuchverlag Leipzig im Carl Hanser Verlag München 2015,, E-Book-.
- Ulrich Busch, Michael Thomas : Ein Vierteljahrhundert Deutsche Einheit – Facetten einer unvollendeten Integration. trafo Wissenschaftsverlag, Berlin 2015,.
- Werner Kriesel: Zukunfts-Modelle für Informatik, Automatik und Kommunikation. In: Frank Fuchs-Kittowski; Werner Kriesel : Informatik und Gesellschaft. Festschrift zum 80. Geburtstag von Klaus Fuchs-Kittowski. Peter Lang Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften, PL Academic Research, Frankfurt a. M.; Bern; Bruxelles; New York; Oxford; Warszawa; Wien 2016, , E-.