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In these ground-breaking essays, Heinz von Foerster discusses some of the fundamental principles that govern how we know the world and how we process the information from which we derive that knowledge. The author was one of the founders of the science of cybernetics.
How real is reality? Are our images of the world mere
inventions, or does an external reality correspond to them? Is it
possible to know the truth?
Heinz von Foerster was the inventor of second-order cybernetics,
which recognizes the investigator as part of the system he is
investigating. The Beginning of Heaven and Earth Has No Name
provides an accessible, nonmathematical, and comprehensive overview
of von Foerster's cybernetic ideas and of the philosophy latent
within them. It distills concepts scattered across the lifework of
this scientific polymath and influential interdisciplinarian. At
the same time, as a book-length interview, it does justice to von
Foerster's elan as a speaker and improviser, his skill as a
raconteur.
Transactions Of The Sixth Conference, March 24-25, 1949. Contributing Authors Include John Stroud, Lawrence S. Kubie, Heinz Von Foerster And Norbert Wiener.
Transactions Of The Sixth Conference, March 24-25, 1949. Contributing Authors Include John Stroud, Lawrence S. Kubie, Heinz Von Foerster And Norbert Wiener.
In these essays Heinz von Foerster discusses some of the fundamental principles that govern how we know the world and how we process the information from which we derive that knowledge. Included are path- breaking articles concerning the principles of computation in neural nets (1967), the definition of self-organizing systems (1960), the nature of cognition (1970), as well as recent expansions on these themes (e.g. "How recursive is communication," 1993). Working with Norbert Wiener, Warren McCullough, and others in the 1960s and 1970s, von Foerster was one of the founders of the science of cybernetics, which has had profound effects both on modern systems theory and on the philosophy of cognition. At the Biological Computer Laboratory at the University of Illinois he produced the first parallel computers and contributed to many other developments in the theory of computation and cognition.
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