Biography:Paul Cockshott

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Short description: Scottish computer scientist and economist
William Paul Cockshott
Paul cockshott new book.jpg
Born (1952-03-16) 16 March 1952 (age 71)
NationalityScottish, British
Alma materManchester University (BaEcon)
Heriot Watt University (MSc)
Edinburgh University (PhD)
Scientific career
FieldsComputer science
Marxian economics
InstitutionsUniversity of Glasgow
Websitepaulcockshott.wordpress.com

William Paul Cockshott (born 16 March 1952) is a Scottish academic in the fields of computer science and Marxist economics. He is a Reader at the University of Glasgow. Since 1993 he has authored multiple works in the tradition of scientific socialism, most notably Towards a New Socialism and How the World Works.

Scientific career

Cockshott earned a BA in Economics (1974) from Manchester University, an MSc (1976) in Computer Science from Heriot Watt University and a PhD in Computer Science from Edinburgh University (1982).[1]

He has made contributions in the fields of image compression, 3D television, parallel compilers and medical imaging, but became known to a wider audience for his proposals in the multi-disciplinary area of economic computability, most notably as co-author, along the economist Allin F. Cottrell [de], of the book Towards a New Socialism, in which they strongly advocate the use of cybernetics for efficient and democratic planning of a complex socialist economy.[2]

He proposes a moneyless socialist economy, akin to Karl Marx's description of a socialist society in Critique of the Gotha Programme, realized by today's computer technology:

Political views

In the 1970s, Cockshott was a member of the British and Irish Communist Organisation, but he and several other members became unhappy with B&ICO's position on workers' control.[4] Cockshott and several other B&ICO members resigned and formed a new party, the Communist Organisation in the British Isles.[4]

Cockshott advocates for a system of a moneyless economy based on a computerized planned economy and direct democracy.[2] He has criticized the economic calculation problem on the grounds that planning can be made feasible via computerization and allocation based on labor time.[2][5]

Published works

  • Cockshott, P. (1990). Ps-Algol Implementations: Applications in Persistent Object Oriented Programming, Ellis Horwood Ltd. ISBN:978-0745808277
  • Cockshott, P. (1990). A Compiler Writer's Toolbox: Interactive Compilers for PCs With Turbo Pascal, Ellis Horwood Ltd. ISBN:978-0131737907
  • Cockshott, P., Cottrell, A. (1993). Towards a New Socialism, Spokesman. ISBN:978-0851245454
  • Cockshott, P., Renfrew K. (2004). SIMD Programming Manual for Linux and Windows, Springer. ISBN:978-1852337940
  • Cockshott, P. (2010). Transition to 21st Century Socialism in the European Union, Lulu. ISBN:978-1445715070
  • Cockshott, P. (2011). Glasgow Pascal Compiler with vector extensions, Lulu. ISBN:978-1447761563
  • Cockshott, P., Zachariah, D. (2012). Arguments for Socialism, Lulu. ISBN:978-1471658945
  • Cockshott, P., Cottrell, A., Michaelson, G., Wright, I., Yakovenko, V. (2012). Classical Econophysics, Routledge. ISBN:978-0415696463
  • Cockshott, P., Mackenzie, L., Michaelson, G. (2015). Computation and its Limits, Oxford University Press. ISBN:978-0198729129
  • Cockshott, P. (2019). How the World Works: The Story of Human Labor from Prehistory to the Modern Day, Monthly Review Press. ISBN:978-1-58367-777-3

References

  1. Cockshott, Paul. "Curriculum Vitae". http://www.dcs.gla.ac.uk/~wpc/reports/cv.html. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Cottrell, Allin; Cockshott, W. Paul (1993). Towards a new socialism. Nottingham, England: Spokesman. http://ricardo.ecn.wfu.edu/~cottrell/socialism_book/index.html. Retrieved 17 March 2012. 
  3. Cockshott, Paul (2020). How the World Works: The Story of Human Labor from Prehistory to the Modern Day. Monthly Review Press. pp. 316. ISBN 978-1-58367-777-3. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 What is the Communist Organisation in the British Isles? in Proletarian, No. 1, c. 1974.
  5. Cockshott, Paul. Calculation, Complexity And Planning: The Socialist Calculation Debate Once Again. 

External links