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  1. Introduction to anticipation studies
    Autor*in: Poli, Roberto
    Erschienen: 2017
    Verlag:  Springer International Publishing, Cham

    Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- References -- Chapter 2: Anticipation in the Natural Sciences -- 2.1 Physics -- 2.2 Biology -- 2.2.1 The Good Samaritan -- 2.2.2 Intelligence -- 2.2.3 Ascendency and Overhead -- 2.2.4... mehr

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    Hochschulbibliothek Friedensau
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    Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- References -- Chapter 2: Anticipation in the Natural Sciences -- 2.1 Physics -- 2.2 Biology -- 2.2.1 The Good Samaritan -- 2.2.2 Intelligence -- 2.2.3 Ascendency and Overhead -- 2.2.4 Anticipation -- References -- Chapter 3: Anticipation in the Human and Social Sciences -- 3.1 Psychology -- 3.2 Anthropology -- 3.3 Sociology -- 3.3.1 Projects and Habits -- 3.3.2 Abstract and Concrete Futures -- 3.3.3 Forms of Coordination -- 3.3.4 Utopias - Real or Ortherwise -- 3.3.5 Future Moves -- 3.4 Economics -- 3.4.1 Fictions -- 3.4.1.1 Non-predictive Strategies -- 3.4.2 Anticipatory Organizations -- 3.4.3 Synthetic Information -- References -- Chapter 4: Understanding the Future -- 4.1 Approaching the Study of the Future -- 4.1.1 The First Studies on the Future -- 4.1.2 Facta and Futura -- 4.1.3 Dispositions -- 4.1.4 The Futures in the Making -- 4.1.5 Levels of Depth of Futures Study -- 4.1.6 Futures and Utopias -- 4.1.7 Foresight 2.0 -- 4.2 Types of Future -- 4.2.1 Ways of Using the Future -- 4.2.2 Future-Generating Research -- 4.3 Futures Literacy -- 4.4 Toward a Theory of Anticipation? -- References -- Chapter 5: Anticipation in Philosophy -- 5.1 Philosophical Samples -- 5.1.1 Henri Bergson -- 5.1.2 Edmund Husserl -- 5.1.3 George Herbert Mead -- 5.1.4 Alfred North Whitehead -- 5.1.5 Charles Peirce -- 5.1.6 Hans Jonas -- 5.1.7 Martin Heidegger -- 5.1.8 Gilles Deleuze -- 5.2 Ernst Bloch -- 5.3 Nicolai Hartmann -- 5.4 Ethics -- References -- Chapter 6: Ontological Sketches -- 6.1 Ontological Preliminaries -- 6.2 Structural and Functional Analysis -- 6.3 Wholes and Their Parts -- 6.4 Encapsulation -- References -- Chapter 7: Process, Cause, and Emergence -- 7.1 Process -- 7.2 Causation -- 7.2.1 Aristotle's Four Causes -- 7.2.2 Organicity and the Autopoietic Cycle 7.2.3 The Newtonian Isolation of Causes -- 7.3 Emergence and Creativity -- 7.4 Levels of Reality -- 7.4.1 Towards a Layered Social Ontology -- 7.4.2 Emergence and Latents -- 7.4.3 Emergents and Values -- 7.4.4 Social Innovation -- References -- Chapter 8: Time and Times -- 8.1 Time as a Category -- 8.2 Real Time -- 8.2.1 First-Order Level of Time -- 8.2.2 Second-Order Level of Time -- 8.2.3 Third-Order Level of Time -- 8.3 Thick Present: Psychological Time -- 8.4 Thick Present: Social Time -- 8.4.1 Historical Time -- 8.4.2 Natural and Artificial Social Rhythms -- 8.4.3 Culturally-Biased Temporal Patterns -- 8.4.4 Unfolding Social Acceleration -- 8.4.5 Dimensions of Future Projections -- 8.4.6 Types of Social Time -- References -- Chapter 9: Systems -- 9.1 Analysis and Synthesis -- 9.2 Systems and Subsystems -- 9.2.1 To Understand X, Look at Y! -- 9.2.2 Controllers -- 9.2.3 Models -- 9.3 Causes, Complexity and Dynamics -- 9.4 Glimpses of a New Territory -- References -- Chapter 10: Complexity -- 10.1 Complicated vs. Complex Systems -- 10.2 Adequate Models -- 10.3 Natural Complexity -- 10.4 Two Principles -- References -- Chapter 11: Impredicativity -- 11.1 A First Glance at Impredicativity -- 11.2 Basic Properties of Impredicative Systems -- 11.3 The Impredicativity of Social Systems -- 11.3.1 Systems Over Systems -- 11.3.2 Inside and Outside -- 11.4 Error -- References -- Chapter 12: The Modeling Relation -- 12.1 Introductory Aspects -- 12.2 Qualities and Observables -- 12.3 Sequential and Hierarchical Cycles -- 12.3.1 Relational Diagram -- 12.3.2 Sequential Cycle -- 12.3.3 Hierarchical Cycles -- 12.4 Impredicative, Anticipatory and CLEF Systems -- References -- Chapter 13: The Self-Generation of Models -- 13.1 The Two Divides -- 13.2 Interactivism -- 13.3 Back and Forth -- 13.3.1 Psychological Acts and their Correlates -- 13.3.2 Presentations 13.3.3 The Challenge of Perception -- 13.3.4 Experimental Phenomenology -- References -- Chapter 14: Applying Anticipation -- 14.1 Learning from Samples of One or Fewer -- 14.2 Anticipation and Organizations -- 14.3 Anticipatory Governance -- 14.3.1 Why Anticipatory Governance is Needed -- 14.3.2 Auftragstaktik -- 14.3.2.1 Anticipatory Governance and Auftragstaktik -- 14.4 Capabilities -- 14.4.1 A Very Brief Introduction to the Capability Approach -- 14.4.2 The Capability Approach and the Future -- 14.4.3 Becoming Agents -- 14.4.4 Generating and Consuming Futures -- References -- Chapter 15: What Next? -- 15.1 Understanding Anticipation I -- 15.1.1 The Present -- 15.1.2 Visibles -- 15.1.3 Latents -- 15.2 Understanding Anticipation II -- 15.2.1 Implicit Anticipation -- 15.2.2 Explicit Anticipation -- 15.3 Anticipation and Anticipatory Systems -- 15.4 Relational Ontology -- References -- Index

     

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    Quelle: Leibniz-Institut für Deutsche Sprache, Bibliothek
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9783319630236
    Schriftenreihe: Anticipation science ; volume 1
    Schlagworte: Future, The--Social aspects
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (281 pages)