The pentagon of powerHarcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1970 - 496 pages |
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Page 313
... intelligence from all its self-regulating, self- protecting organic sources, since the unique property that cannot be transferred to any kind of programmed automaton is life itself. Seidenberg regarded this change as an irreversible ...
... intelligence from all its self-regulating, self- protecting organic sources, since the unique property that cannot be transferred to any kind of programmed automaton is life itself. Seidenberg regarded this change as an irreversible ...
Page 315
... intelligence, and that the intelligence, in an increasingly abstract mathematical form, is the highest manifestation of mind. William Blake might have saved him from this error: for with his anxiety over the possible consequences of ...
... intelligence, and that the intelligence, in an increasingly abstract mathematical form, is the highest manifestation of mind. William Blake might have saved him from this error: for with his anxiety over the possible consequences of ...
Page 317
... intelligence. Information is equated with existence. Such intelligence is only a limited part, but now a grossly overgrown part of "the phenomenon of man." By resolutely forgetting this fact Teilhard de Chardin makes the commands of ...
... intelligence. Information is equated with existence. Such intelligence is only a limited part, but now a grossly overgrown part of "the phenomenon of man." By resolutely forgetting this fact Teilhard de Chardin makes the commands of ...
Table des matières
NEW EXPLORATIONS NEW WORLDS | 3 |
RETURN OF THE SUN GOD | 28 |
THE MECHANIZED WORLD PICTURE | 51 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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absolute abstract achieved activities actually already ancient atom automatic automation Bacon become biological Christian civilization Comenius communication contemporary cosmic culture demands Descartes destruction dream economy economy of abundance effect electronic energy environment established evolution existence experience exploration extermination fact fantasies final forces Francis Bacon functions further future Galileo habitat Henry Adams idea ideological immense increase industrial institutions intelligence invention Kepler knowledge labor limited machine man's mass production mechanical world picture megamachine megatechnics ment merely method military mind mode modern moral myth nature nineteenth century noosphere Norbert Wiener nuclear observed once original Patrick Geddes physical planet plenitude political absolutism population possible potentialities power complex power system practical present progress purpose Pyramid Age quantity reality result scientific scientists social society space subjective symbolic technical Technics and Civilization technocratic tion totalitarian transformation turn ultimate utopia whole York