https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edwin_Schlossberg
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Schlossberg graduated from Manhattan’s Birch Wathen School then took his undergraduate and post-graduate education at Columbia University eventually earning a Ph.D. in Science and Literature in 1971.[3][5][6] His thesis, which was later published as a book, was an imaginary conversation between Albert Einstein and Samuel Beckett, an idea that Schlossberg conceived while napping at Columbia’s philosophy library.[7] One of his advisors in Columbia was mathematician and philosopher Jacob Bronowski, and was also mentored by futurist Buckminster Fuller.[8][7]
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Schlossberg developed as an artist during the 1960s in New York.[9] His style has been described as usage of words and image, through unconventional media, to create visual poetry in his art.[9][10] He has been singled out as a “leader in interactive design” by Wired magazine,[8] and has also been called a Renaissance man, an
intellectual jack-of-all-trades, and the grandmaster of interactivity by several publications.[8][7][11]
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