General System Theory: Foundations, Development, Applications |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 40
Page 24
... language . His- tory of science attests that expression in ordinary language often preceded mathematical formulation , i.e. , invention of an algo- rithm . Examples come easily to mind : the evolution from count- ing in words to Roman ...
... language . His- tory of science attests that expression in ordinary language often preceded mathematical formulation , i.e. , invention of an algo- rithm . Examples come easily to mind : the evolution from count- ing in words to Roman ...
Page 223
... languages . Can statements in languages like Nootka or Hopi be rendered by the usual logistic notation , or is the latter itself a formalization of the structure of Indo - European language ? It appears that this important subject has ...
... languages . Can statements in languages like Nootka or Hopi be rendered by the usual logistic notation , or is the latter itself a formalization of the structure of Indo - European language ? It appears that this important subject has ...
Page 238
... language and world view is not unidirectional but reciprocal , a fact which perhaps was not made sufficiently clear by Whorf . The structure of language seems to determine which traits of reality are abstracted and hence what form the ...
... language and world view is not unidirectional but reciprocal , a fact which perhaps was not made sufficiently clear by Whorf . The structure of language seems to determine which traits of reality are abstracted and hence what form the ...
Contents
The Meaning of General System Theory | 30 |
Science and Society | 51 |
Advances in General System Theory | 89 |
Copyright | |
10 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
allometric animal appears applied approach aspects atoms basic Bertalanffy biological CALIFORN catabolism causality cell characteristics chemical classical classical physics closed systems complex components consideration considered constant contrast cultural Cybernetics defined differential dynamic editor elements energy entities entropy equations equifinality equilibrium essentially evolution example existence experience expressed fact feedback fields formulation function game theory growth curves homeostasis important increase individual information theory interaction isomorphic kinetics language laws living organism living systems LOS ANGELES Lotka Ludwig von Bertalanffy machine mathematical means mechanisms mechanistic mental metabolic rate modern nature nervous system open systems organismic phenomena physics physiological possible present principle problems processes protein psychology psychophysical quantitative reaction reality regulation relations robot scientific sense similar so-called sociological specific steady structure symbolic system theory teleology theoretical theory of open thermodynamics tion UNIVERSITY LOS ANGELES vitalistic weight whole world picture York