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The Map and the Territory - Exploring the Foundations of Science, Thought and Reality (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2018)
Loot Price: R3,943
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The Map and the Territory - Exploring the Foundations of Science, Thought and Reality (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2018)
Series: The Frontiers Collection
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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This volume presents essays by pioneering thinkers including Tyler
Burge, Gregory Chaitin, Daniel Dennett, Barry Mazur, Nicholas
Humphrey, John Searle and Ian Stewart. Together they illuminate the
Map/Territory Distinction that underlies at the foundation of the
scientific method, thought and the very reality itself. It is
imperative to distinguish Map from the Territory while analyzing
any subject but we often mistake map for the territory. Meaning for
the Reference. Computational tool for what it computes.
Representations are handy and tempting that we often end up
committing the category error of over-marrying the representation
with what is represented, so much so that the distinction between
the former and the latter is lost. This error that has its roots in
the pedagogy often generates a plethora of paradoxes/confusions
which hinder the proper understanding of the subject. What are wave
functions? Fields? Forces? Numbers? Sets? Classes? Operators?
Functions? Alphabets and Sentences? Are they a part of our map
(theory/representation)? Or do they actually belong to the
territory (Reality)? Researcher, like a cartographer, clothes (or
creates?) the reality by stitching multitudes of maps that
simultaneously co-exist. A simple apple, for example, can be
analyzed from several viewpoints beginning with evolution and
biology, all the way down its microscopic quantum mechanical
components. Is there a reality (or a real apple) out there apart
from these maps? How do these various maps interact/intermingle
with each other to produce a coherent reality that we interact
with? Or do they not? Does our brain uses its own internal maps to
facilitate "physicist/mathematician" in us to construct the maps
about the external territories in turn? If so, what is the nature
of these internal maps? Are there meta-maps? Evolution definitely
fences our perception and thereby our ability to construct maps,
revealing to us only those aspects beneficial for our survival. But
the question is, to what extent? Is there a way out of the
metaphorical Platonic cave erected around us by the nature? While
"Map is not the territory" as Alfred Korzybski remarked, join us in
this journey to know more, while we inquire on the nature and the
reality of the maps which try to map the reality out there. The
book also includes a foreword by Sir Roger Penrose and an afterword
by Dagfinn Follesdal.
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