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OverviewHow 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? These are questions that physicist and philosopher Heinz von Foerster and journalist Bernhard Poerksen debate about in their conversations. Together, they explore the borders of our capacity for knowledge. They discuss the seeming objectivity of our sensual perception, the consequences of ""truth terrorism"" and the connections between knowledge and ethics, sight and insight. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Heinz Von Foerster , Heinz Von FoersterPublisher: Springer Science+Business Media Imprint: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers Edition: 2002 ed. Volume: 17 Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.10cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.920kg ISBN: 9780306467523ISBN 10: 0306467526 Pages: 158 Publication Date: 24 July 2003 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Awaiting stock ![]() The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you. Table of Contents"Preface. A Foreword in Three Acts. I: Images of Reality. 1. Biology of Perception. The representation of the world. We never see the same thing. A short skit. Decision against solipsism. 2. Facets of Truth. Truth means war. The hidden workings of nature. The ethical imperative. Loss of the archimedic point. The metaphor of the dance. 3. The Danger of the Label. Skeptical remarks on Constructivism. An attempt to get around the big words. 4. Explaining the Explanation. Cause and effect. Laws of people and laws of nature. Why Socrates had to die. Trivial and nontrivial machines. The interaction of nontrivial machines. II: Perspectives in Practice. 1. Teaching. The pupil as a nontrivial machine. ""Tests test tests"". From teacher to researcher. Outline of an experiment. 2. Psychotherapy. The distinction between sickness and health. Generating a new eigenbehavior. Learning to see white mice. 3. Management. Thus spake the hierarchy. Thinking heterarchically. The Battle of Midway. Principles of self-organization. 4. Communication. The world contains no information. Hermeneutics of the listener. Realities of the media. III: Cybernetics. The Fundamental Principle: Circularity. People and Machines. The Computer Metaphor of the Mind. Cybernetics of Cybernetics. We Do not See that We Do not See. All Cretans Lie. IV: Biographical Excursions. 1. Childhood and Youth. The world of Vienna. Ludwig Wittgenstein. Experiences of a magician. 2. The Second World War and the Post-war Period. Survival in Berlin, the capital of the Reich. As ""Dr. Heinrich"" on the radio. Collective guilt or individual responsibility. 3. A Jump to another World: America. Theory of memory. Beginnings of Cybernetics: The Macy Conferences. The Biological Computer Laboratory. V: Knowledge and Ethics. Ethics is not a Theory. Decidable and Undecidable Questions. Responsibility for the World. About the Authors."ReviewsThis book is rich with insights, full of inspiring expression and also filled with wisdom so that you really want to distribute it like a leaflet. <br>(Book Review German Radio) """This book is rich with insights, full of inspiring expression and also filled with wisdom so that you really want to distribute it like a leaflet."" (Book Review German Radio)" This book is rich with insights, full of inspiring expression and also filled with wisdom so that you really want to distribute it like a leaflet. (Book Review German Radio) Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |