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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Brian Skyrms (Stanford University and the University of California, Irvine)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 13.50cm , Height: 1.10cm , Length: 20.20cm Weight: 0.241kg ISBN: 9780199582945ISBN 10: 0199582947 Pages: 208 Publication Date: 08 April 2010 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsIntroduction 1: Signals 2: Signals in Nature 3: The Flow of Information 4: Evolution 5: Evolution in Lewis Signaling Games 6: Deception 7: Learning 8: Learning in Lewis Signaling Games 9: Generalizing Signaling Games: Synonyms, Bottlenecks and Other Mismatches 10: Inventing New Signals 11: Networks I: Information Processing 12: Complex Signals and Compositionality 13: Networks II: Teamwork 14: Learning to NetworkReviewsan extremely stimulating introduction to a fast growing literature... The book is impressively successful in demonstrating the sheer variety of links that signals have to many philosophical themes, as well as the daring scope for future work. One can only hope that this signal is successfully received. * Cedric Paternotte, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews * Signals is an exciting book that blazes a trail towards a new understanding of communication and information processing. * Elliott O.Wagner and Michael Franke, British Journal for the Philosophy of Science * Signals opens up many projects and theoretical directions. A slogan might be offered: a theory of meaning is a theory of sender-receiver coordination. From this point of view, many earlier approaches to meaning have been one-sided, focusing on either the expressive side or the interpretive side of an essentially two-sided set-up. Skyrms's naturalization and extension of the Lewis sender-receiver model is one of the most exciting developments in recent philosophy. * Peter Godfrey-Smith, Mind * This book will make highly rewarding reading for philosophers, economists and biologists alike...an important addition to the literature on signalling theory, and should be widely discussed. * Armin W. Schulz, Journal of Economic Methodology * excellent . . . deserves to be read by anyone who is interested in the origins and analysis of communication and information processing . . . an exciting book that blazes a trail towards a new understanding of communication and information processing. This book will make highly rewarding reading for philosophers, economists and biologists alike...an important addition to the literature on signalling theory, and should be widely discussed. Armin W. Schulz, Journal of Economic Methodology Signals opens up many projects and theoretical directions. A slogan might be offered: a theory of meaning is a theory of sender-receiver coordination. From this point of view, many earlier approaches to meaning have been one-sided, focusing on either the expressive side or the interpretive side of an essentially two-sided set-up. Skyrms's naturalization and extension of the Lewis sender-receiver model is one of the most exciting developments in recent philosophy. Peter Godfrey-Smith, Mind an extremely stimulating introduction to a fast growing literature... The book is impressively successful in demonstrating the sheer variety of links that signals have to many philosophical themes, as well as the daring scope for future work. One can only hope that this signal is successfully received. Cedric Paternotte, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews Signals opens up many projects and theoretical directions. A slogan might be offered: a theory of meaning is a theory of sender-receiver coordination. From this point of view, many earlier approaches to meaning have been one-sided, focusing on either the expressive side or the interpretive side of an essentially two-sided set-up. Skyrms's naturalization and extension of the Lewis sender-receiver model is one of the most exciting developments in recent philosophy. Peter Godfrey-Smith, Mind an extremely stimulating introduction to a fast growing literature... The book is impressively successful in demonstrating the sheer variety of links that signals have to many philosophical themes, as well as the daring scope for future work. One can only hope that this signal is successfully received. Cedric Paternotte, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews an extremely stimulating introduction to a fast growing literature... The book is impressively successful in demonstrating the sheer variety of links that signals have to many philosophical themes, as well as the daring scope for future work. One can only hope that this signal is successfully received. Cedric Paternotte, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews Author InformationBrian Skyrms is a Distinguished Professor of logic and Philosophy of Science at the University of California Irvine, and Professor of Philosophy at Stanford University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |