Where the Sun Never Shines Emerging Paradigms of Post-Enlightened Cognition
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The Being of Analogy Noah Roderick Noah Roderick the Being of Analogy
Noah Roderick The Being of Analogy Noah Roderick Noah Roderick The Being of Analogy The Being of Modern physics replaced the dualism of matter and form with a new distinction between matter and force. In this way form was marginalized, and with it the related notion of the object. Noah Roderick’s book is a refreshing effort to reverse the consequences of this now banal mainstream materialism. Ranging from physics through literature to linguistics, spanning philosophy from East to West, and weaving it all together in remarkably lucid prose, Roderick intro- duces a new concept of analogy that sheds unfamiliar light on such thinkers as Marx, Deleuze, Goodman, Sellars, and Foucault. More than a literary device, analogy teaches us something about being itself. OPEN HUMANITIES PRESS Cover design by Katherine Gillieson · Illustration by Tammy Lu The Being of Analogy New Metaphysics Series Editors: Graham Harman and Bruno Latour The world is due for a resurgence of original speculative metaphysics. The New Metaphys- ics series aims to provide a safe house for such thinking amidst the demoralizing caution and prudence of professional academic philosophy. We do not aim to bridge the analytic- continental divide, since we are equally impatient with nail-filing analytic critique and the continental reverence for dusty textual monuments. We favor instead the spirit of the intel- lectual gambler, and wish to discover and promote authors who meet this description. Like an emergent recording company, what we seek are traces of a new metaphysical ‘sound’ from any nation of the world. The editors are open to translations of neglected metaphysical classics, and will consider secondary works of especial force and daring. -
Cumulated Bibliography of Biographies of Ocean Scientists Deborah Day, Scripps Institution of Oceanography Archives Revised December 3, 2001
Cumulated Bibliography of Biographies of Ocean Scientists Deborah Day, Scripps Institution of Oceanography Archives Revised December 3, 2001. Preface This bibliography attempts to list all substantial autobiographies, biographies, festschrifts and obituaries of prominent oceanographers, marine biologists, fisheries scientists, and other scientists who worked in the marine environment published in journals and books after 1922, the publication date of Herdman’s Founders of Oceanography. The bibliography does not include newspaper obituaries, government documents, or citations to brief entries in general biographical sources. Items are listed alphabetically by author, and then chronologically by date of publication under a legend that includes the full name of the individual, his/her date of birth in European style(day, month in roman numeral, year), followed by his/her place of birth, then his date of death and place of death. Entries are in author-editor style following the Chicago Manual of Style (Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 14th ed., 1993). Citations are annotated to list the language if it is not obvious from the text. Annotations will also indicate if the citation includes a list of the scientist’s papers, if there is a relationship between the author of the citation and the scientist, or if the citation is written for a particular audience. This bibliography of biographies of scientists of the sea is based on Jacqueline Carpine-Lancre’s bibliography of biographies first published annually beginning with issue 4 of the History of Oceanography Newsletter (September 1992). It was supplemented by a bibliography maintained by Eric L. Mills and citations in the biographical files of the Archives of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UCSD. -
Aesthetics After Finitude Anamnesis Anamnesis Means Remembrance Or Reminiscence, the Collection and Re- Collection of What Has Been Lost, Forgotten, Or Effaced
Aesthetics After Finitude Anamnesis Anamnesis means remembrance or reminiscence, the collection and re- collection of what has been lost, forgotten, or effaced. It is therefore a matter of the very old, of what has made us who we are. But anamnesis is also a work that transforms its subject, always producing something new. To recollect the old, to produce the new: that is the task of Anamnesis. a re.press series Aesthetics After Finitude Baylee Brits, Prudence Gibson and Amy Ireland, editors re.press Melbourne 2016 re.press PO Box 40, Prahran, 3181, Melbourne, Australia http://www.re-press.org © the individual contributors and re.press 2016 This work is ‘Open Access’, published under a creative commons license which means that you are free to copy, distribute, display, and perform the work as long as you clearly attribute the work to the authors, that you do not use this work for any commercial gain in any form whatso- ever and that you in no way alter, transform or build on the work outside of its use in normal aca- demic scholarship without express permission of the author (or their executors) and the publisher of this volume. For any reuse or distribution, you must make clear to others the license terms of this work. For more information see the details of the creative commons licence at this website: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication Data Title: Aesthetics after finitude / Baylee Brits, Prudence Gibson and Amy Ireland, editors. ISBN: 9780980819793 (paperback) Series: Anamnesis Subjects: Aesthetics. -
Mitigating the Attraction Effect with Visualizations Evanthia Dimara, Gilles Bailly, Anastasia Bezerianos, Steven Franconeri
Mitigating the Attraction Effect with Visualizations Evanthia Dimara, Gilles Bailly, Anastasia Bezerianos, Steven Franconeri To cite this version: Evanthia Dimara, Gilles Bailly, Anastasia Bezerianos, Steven Franconeri. Mitigating the Attrac- tion Effect with Visualizations. IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics, Insti- tute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, 2019, TVCG 2019 (InfoVis 2018), 25 (1), pp.850 - 860. 10.1109/TVCG.2018.2865233. hal-01845004v2 HAL Id: hal-01845004 https://hal.inria.fr/hal-01845004v2 Submitted on 22 Aug 2018 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. This article has been accepted for publication in a future issue of this journal, but has not been fully edited. Content may change prior to final publication. Citation information: DOI 10.1109/TVCG.2018.2865233, IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics Mitigating the Attraction Effect with Visualizations Evanthia Dimara, Gilles Bailly, Anastasia Bezerianos, and Steven Franconeri Abstract—Human decisions are prone to biases, and this is no less true for decisions made within data visualizations. Bias mitigation strategies often focus on the person, by educating people about their biases, typically with little success. We focus instead on the system, presenting the first evidence that altering the design of an interactive visualization tool can mitigate a strong bias – the attraction effect. -
How a Machine Learns and Fails 2019
Repositorium für die Medienwissenschaft Matteo Pasquinelli How a Machine Learns and Fails 2019 https://doi.org/10.25969/mediarep/13490 Veröffentlichungsversion / published version Zeitschriftenartikel / journal article Empfohlene Zitierung / Suggested Citation: Pasquinelli, Matteo: How a Machine Learns and Fails. In: spheres: Journal for Digital Cultures. Spectres of AI (2019), Nr. 5, S. 1–17. DOI: https://doi.org/10.25969/mediarep/13490. Erstmalig hier erschienen / Initial publication here: https://spheres-journal.org/wp-content/uploads/spheres-5_Pasquinelli.pdf Nutzungsbedingungen: Terms of use: Dieser Text wird unter einer Creative Commons - This document is made available under a creative commons - Namensnennung - Nicht kommerziell - Keine Bearbeitungen 4.0/ Attribution - Non Commercial - No Derivatives 4.0/ License. For Lizenz zur Verfügung gestellt. Nähere Auskünfte zu dieser Lizenz more information see: finden Sie hier: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ © the author(s) 2019 www.spheres-journal.org ISSN 2363-8621 #5 Spectres of AI sadfasdf MATTEO PASQUINELLI HOW A MACHINE LEARNS AND FAILS – A GRAMMAR OF ERROR FOR ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE “Once the characteristic numbers are established for most concepts, mankind will then possess a new instrument which will enhance the capabilities of the mind to a far greater extent than optical instruments strengthen the eyes, and will supersede the microscope and telescope to the same extent that reason is superior to eyesight.”1 — Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. “The Enlightenment was […] not about consensus, it was not about systematic unity, and it was not about the deployment of instrumental reason: what was developed in the Enlightenment was a modern idea of truth defined by error, a modern idea of knowledge defined by failure, conflict, and risk, but also hope.”2 — David Bates. -
L'homme Sous La Mer Juin 2010 Définitif
L’Homme sous la Mer Du vendredi 4 au dimanche 27 juin 2010 Espace Saint-Nazaire, Théâtre Galli, Baie de Sanary Sommaire Communiqué 2 Temps forts de « l’Homme sous la mer » 3 Vendredi 4 juin 4 Samedi 5 juin, conférence animée par Gérard Carrodano 5 Vendredi 11 juin, cérémonie du 100 ème anniversaire de la naissance du C. Cousteau 6/7 Samedi 12 et dimanche 13 juin, conférences animée par les anciens de la « Calypso » 8 Vendredi 18 juin, conférence animée par René Heuzey 9 Samedi 26 juin, conférence animée par Gaby Di Domenico 10 Exposition municipale - Présentation du Musée Frédéric Dumas 11 Exposition municipale - Présentation de l’association Immersio 12 L’homme sous la mer 13 Historique de la plongée 14/22 Histoire de la plongée à Sanary 23 Sanary et les « Mousquemers » 24 Habiter sous la mer 25 Travailler sous la mer 26 Préserver, sauvegarder 27 Service Communication 04 94 32 97 37 [email protected] www.sanrysurmer.com L’Homme sous la Mer Du vendredi 4 au dimanche 27 juin 2010 Espace Saint-Nazaire, Théâtre Galli, Baie de Sanary Communiqué Cité historique de la plongée sous marine, la ville de Sanary-sur-Mer vous offre un voyage dans l’histoire de la plongée et la mise en perspective de Sanary dans cette aventure, en collaboration avec les associations « Musée Frédéric Dumas », « Immersio », le Festival Mondial de l’Image Sous-marine et « Submareum ». « l’Homme sous la mer », du vendredi 4 au dimanche 27 juin 2010 , Espace Saint Nazaire , Théâtre Galli, baie de Sanary Inauguration : vendredi 4 juin – 18h30 : Espace Saint-Nazaire et 21h : Théâtre Galli Sanary-sur-Mer occupe une place exceptionnelle dans l’histoire de la plongée, elle-même indissociable de l’aventure des « Mousquemers », Frédéric Dumas, Philippe Tailliez, et Jacques Yves Cousteau. -
Download the Full Article As Pdf ⬇︎
The Mediterranean’s Côte d’Azur — Where It All Began Text and photos by Kurt Amsler Translation by Peter Symes Edited by Catherine GS Lim 14 X-RAY MAG : 63 : 2014 EDITORIAL FEATURES TRAVEL NEWS WRECKS EQUIPMENT BOOKS SCIENCE & ECOLOGY TECH EDUCATION PROFILES PHOTO & VIDEO PORTFOLIO travel Côte d’Azur Coming full circle. It all started in the Med. It was here in the 1930’s and 40’s that the likes of Hans Hass, Jacques-Yves Cousteau, Frederic Dumas and Phillip Tailliez pioneered scuba diving as we came to know it. Erstwhile the obvious choice for dive travelers once the Red Sea and even more exotic destinations became accessible to a wider audience, it fell somewhat out of favor. But now, it’s back on the map, the fish are back and so are the divers. Kurt Amsler gives us the lowdown on diving in what is now his backyard. Wind the clock back to 1937, and water which seeded the inspiration we will find a young man from that would later make him one of Austria by the name of Hans Hass the greatest diving pioneers. spending his holiday after gradu- It was also in this region that ating from high school in the little three Frenchmen from Marseilles— town of Juan-les-Pins on the French Jacques Cousteau, Frederic Dumas Riviera. It was here he observed an and Phillip Tailliez—who later came Diver at Cape Dramont, Esterel, Côte d’Azur (above); The scenic seaside at Englishman hunting for fish under- to be known as the “The Three Mus- Bandol along the Côte d’Azur (top right). -
Creating Disorientation, Fugue, And
OCCLUSION: CREATING DISORIENTATION, FUGUE, AND APOPHENIA IN AN ART GAME by Klew Williams A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of the WORCESTER POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Interactive Media and Game Development __________________________________________________________ April 27th, 2017 APPROVED: ____________________________________ Brian Moriarty, Thesis Advisor _____________________________________ Dean O’Donnell, Committee _____________________________________ Ralph Sutter, Committee i Abstract Occlusion is a procedurally randomized interactive art experience which uses the motifs of repetition, isolation, incongruity and mutability to develop an experience of a Folie à Deux: a madness shared by two. It draws from traditional video game forms, development methods, and tools to situate itself in context with games as well as other forms of interactive digital media. In this way, Occlusion approaches the making of game-like media from the art criticism perspective of Materiality, and the written work accompanying the prototype discusses critical aesthetic concerns for Occlusion both as an art experience borrowing from games and as a text that can be academically understood in relation to other practices of media making. In addition to the produced software artifact and written analysis, this thesis includes primary research in the form of four interviews with artists, authors, game makers and game critics concerning Materiality and dissociative themes in game-like media. The written work first introduces Occlusion in context with other approaches to procedural remixing, Glitch Art, net.art, and analogue and digital collage and décollage, with special attention to recontextualization and apophenia. The experience, visual, and audio design approach of Occlusion is reviewed through a discussion of explicit design choices which define generative space. -
Superstition in the Machine
Superstition in the Machine Alexander Riegler Center Leo Apostel, Vrije Universiteit Brussel Krijgskundestr. 33, B-1160 Brussels, Belgium [email protected] Abstract. It seems characteristic for humans to detect structural patterns in the world to anticipate future states. Therefore, scientific and common sense cogni- tion could be described as information processing which infers rule-like laws from patterns in data-sets. Since information processing is the domain of com- puters, artificial cognitive systems are generally designed as pattern discoverers. This paper questions the validity of the information processing paradigm as an explanation for human cognition and a design principle for artificial cogni- tive systems. Firstly, it is known from the literature that people suffer from conditions such as information overload, superstition, and mental disorders. Secondly, cognitive limitations such as a small short-term memory, the set- effect, the illusion of explanatory depth, etc. raise doubts as to whether human information processing is able to cope with the enormous complexity of an infi- nitely rich (amorphous) world. It is suggested that, under normal conditions, humans construct information rather than process it. The constructed information contains anticipations which need to be met. This can be hardly called information processing, since patterns from the “outside” are not used to produce action but rather to either justify an- ticipations or restructure the cognitive apparatus. When it fails, cognition switches to pattern processing, which, given the amorphous nature of the experiential world, is a lost cause if these patterns and inferred rules do not lead to a (partial) reorganisation of internal structures such that constructed anticipations can be met again. -
Protecting Against Researcher Bias in Secondary Data Analysis
Protecting against researcher bias in secondary data analysis: Challenges and potential solutions Jessie R. Baldwin1,2, PhD, Jean-Baptiste Pingault1,2, PhD, Tabea Schoeler,1 PhD, Hannah M. Sallis3,4,5, PhD & Marcus R. Munafò3,4,6, PhD 4,618 words; 2 tables; 1 figure 1 Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, Division of Psychology and Language Sciences, University College London, London, UK 2 Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King’s College London, London, UK 3 MRC Integrative Epidemiology Unit at the University of Bristol, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK 4 School of Psychological Science, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK 5 Centre for Academic Mental Health, Population Health Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK 6 NIHR Biomedical Research Centre, University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust and University of Bristol, Bristol, UK Correspondence: Dr. Jessie R. Baldwin, Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, Division of Psychology and Language Sciences, University College London, London, WC1H 0AP, UK; [email protected] Funding: J.R.B is funded by a Wellcome Trust Sir Henry Wellcome fellowship (grant 215917/Z/19/Z). J.B.P is a supported by the Medical Research Foundation 2018 Emerging Leaders 1st Prize in Adolescent Mental Health (MRF-160-0002-ELP-PINGA). M.R.M and H.M.S work in a unit that receives funding from the University of Bristol and the UK Medical Research Council (MC_UU_00011/5, MC_UU_00011/7), and M.R.M is also supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre at the University Hospitals Bristol National Health Service Foundation Trust and the University of Bristol. -
Cognitive Biases and Their Importance for Critical Thinking
Cognitive Biases and Their Importance for Critical Thinking CONTENTS Introduction ...................................................................................................... 2 1.-Cognitive-Biases:-What-They-Are-and-Why-They’re-Important............ 3 2.-Cognitive-Biases-and-the-Authority-of-Science ...................................... 10 3.-Confirmation-Bias-and-the-Evolution-of-Reason ................................... 24 Critical Thinker Academy © Kevin deLaplante 2014 2 Cognitive Biases: An Introduction Introduction In-my-fiveGdimensional-model-of-the-most-important-components-of- critical-thinking-I-put-“knowledge-of-the-psychology-of-human-judgment”- under-the-heading-of-background+knowledge: 1. logic 2. argumentation 3. rhetoric 4. background-knowledge a. of+subject+ma4er b. of+the+history+of+debate+on+a+topic c. of#the#psychology#of#human#judgment 5. character-(aPitudes-and-values) Knowledge-of-cognitive-biases-is-a-subGtopic-that-fits-within-the-broader- category-of-the-psychology-of-human-judgment.- There-has-been-an-explosion-of-research-on-cognitive-biases-over-the- past-forty-years,-but-the-critical-thinking-education-community-has-been- slow-to-integrate-this-content-into-the-traditional-curriculum-of-critical- thinking-textbooks.-There-is-no-doubt,-however,-that-the-study-of-cognitive- biases-will-be-a-central-feature-of-critical-thinking-education-in-the-21st- century.- What They Are and Why They’re Important 3 1. Cognitive Biases: What They Are and Why They’re Important Everyone-agrees-that-logic-and-argumentation-are-important-for-critical- -
The Resonance of Unseen Things Revised Pages Revised Pages
Revised Pages The Resonance of Unseen Things Revised Pages Revised Pages The Resonance of Unseen Things Poetics, Power, Captivity, and UFOs in the American Uncanny Susan Lepselter University of Michigan Press Ann Arbor Revised Pages Copyright © by Susan Lepselter 2016 Published by the University of Michigan Press 2016 All rights reserved This book may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, including illustrations, in any form (beyond that copying permitted by Sections 107 and 108 of the U.S. Copyright Law and except by reviewers for the public press), without written permission from the publisher. Published in the United States of America by the University of Michigan Press Manufactured in the United States of America c Printed on acid- free paper 2019 2018 2017 2016 4 3 2 1 A CIP catalog record for this book is available from the British Library. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Lepselter, Susan Claudia, author. Title: The resonance of unseen things : poetics, power, captivity, and UFOs in the American uncanny / Susan Lepselter. Description: Ann Arbor : University of Michigan Press, 2016. | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifiers: LCCN 2015043812| ISBN 9780472072941 (hardcover : alk. paper) | ISBN 9780472052943 (pbk. : alk. paper) | ISBN 9780472121540 (ebook) Subjects: LCSH: Human-alien encounters. | Conspiracy theories?United States. Classification: LCC BF2050 .L47 2016 | DDC 001.942—dc23 LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2015043812 Revised Pages Acknowledgments This book has morphed in and out of various emergent states for a very long time. It would be impossible to thank everyone who has deepened and expanded my thinking over the years—impossible both because I wish to keep confidential the names of multiple people to whom I am thankful for telling me their own stories, and also because so many people have influenced my ideas in ways too subtle and pervasive to describe.