(Redirected from Arthur W. Burks)'Arthur Walter Burks' (born
October 131915 in
Duluth, Minnesota) is an
American mathematician who in the 1940s as a senior engineer on the project contributed to the design of the
ENIAC, the first general-purpose electronic digital computer. Decades later, Burks and
his wife outlined their case for the subject matter of the ENIAC having been derived from
John Vincent Atanasoff.
Early life and education
Burks earned his B.A. in
mathematics and
physics from
DePauw University in
Greencastle, Indiana in
1936 and his M.A. and Ph.D. in
philosophy from the
University of Michigan in
Ann Arbor in
1937 and
1941, respectively.
The Moore School
The summer after obtaining his Ph.D., the young Dr. Burks moved to
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and enrolled in the national defense electronics course offered by the
University of Pennsylvania's
Moore School of Electrical Engineering; his laboratory teaching assistant was
J. Presper Eckert, a graduate student at the Moore School; a fellow student was
John Mauchly, the chairman of the physics department at
Ursinus College in nearby
Collegeville, Pennsylvania. Both Burks and Mauchly sought and obtained teaching positions at the Moore School the following fall, and roomed together throughout the academic year.
The ENIAC
When Mauchly and Eckert's proposed concept for an electronic digital computer was funded by the U.S. Army's
Ballistics Research Laboratory in June
1943, Burks was added to the design team. Among his principal contributions to the project was the design of the high-speed multiplier unit. (Also during this time, Burks met and married
Alice Rowe, a
computer employed at the Moore School.)
In April 1945, with
John Grist Brainerd, Burks was charged with writing the technical reports on the ENIAC for publication. Also during 1945 Burks assisted with the preliminary logical design of the
EDVAC in meetings attended by Mauchly, Eckert,
John von Neumann, and others.
Burks also took a part-time position as a philosophy instructor at
Swarthmore College during 1945-1946.
The IAS
On
March 8,
1946 Burks accepted an offer by von Neumann to join the
computer project at the
Institute for Advanced Study in
Princeton, New Jersey, and joined full time the following summer. (Already on the project was another member of the ENIAC team,
Herman Goldstine; together, Goldstine and Burks gave nine of the
Moore School Lectures in Summer 1946.) During his time at the IAS, Burks worked to expand von Neumann's
theory of automata.
The University of Michigan
After working on this project, Burks relocated to
Ann Arbor, Michigan in
1946 to join the faculty of the
University of Michigan, first as an assistant professor of philosophy, and as a full professor by
1954. He helped found the university's computer science department, first as the Logic of Computers group in
1956, of which he was the director, then as a graduate program in
1957, and then as an undergraduate program within the new Department of Computer and Communication in
1967, which he chaired until
1971. He declined a position heading up a different university's computing center, citing his primary interest as the purely theoretical aspects of computing machines.
Restoration of parts of the ENIAC
In the 1960s he was presented with the opportunity to acquire four units of the original ENIAC, which had been rusting in a storage
Quonset hut in
Aberdeen, Maryland. He ran the units through a car wash before restoring them and donating them to the University of Michigan. They are currently on display in the entryway of the Computer Science Building near the "foo bar" snack cafeteria.
Patent dispute
In
1964 Burks was approached by attorney Sy Yuter and asked to join
T. Kite Sharpless and
Robert F. Shaw in litigation that would add their names as inventors to the
ENIAC patent, which would allow them to profit from the sale of licenses to the premiere electronic digital computer apart from
Sperry Rand, the company that owned the Eckert-Mauchly interest in the patent and was at that time seeking royalties from other computer manufacturers. This endeavor was never successful; in the
1973 decision to ''
Honeywell v. Sperry Rand'', U.S. District Judge
Earl R. Larson ruled—even as he invalidated the patent—that only Mauchly and Eckert had invented the ENIAC, and that Burks, Sharpless, and Shaw could not be added as inventors.
The BACH Group
In the 1970s Burks began meeting with
Bob Axelrod,
Michael Cohen, and
John Holland, researchers with interests in interdisciplinary approaches to studying complex adaptive systems. Known as the BACH group (an acronym of their surnames), it came to include, among others,
Pulitzer Prize winner
Douglas Hofstadter, and survives today as the University of Michigan
Center for the Study of Complex Systems (CSCS).
In the 1970s and 1980s Burks, working with his wife
Alice, authored a number of articles on the ENIAC, and a book on the
Atanasoff–Berry Computer.
As professor emeritus
In 1990, Burks donated a portion of his papers to the university's Bentley Historical Library, where they are accessible to researchers.
Suffering from dementia, Burks is currently writing his memoirs and resides in an
assisted living facility in Ann Arbor, Michigan.