Results for 'Buckminster Fuller'

968 found
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  1.  3
    R. Buckminster Fuller.R. Buckminster Fuller - 1973 - St. Paul, MN: Minnesota Public Radio.
    Architect-scientist R. Buckminster Fuller talks about the discovery of the eternal pattern that is operative in the universe.
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  2. R. Buckminster Fuller Thinks Aloud, Part.R. Buckminster Fuller - 1967 - Credo.
     
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  3.  16
    R. Buckminster Fuller on education.Richard Buckminster Fuller - 1979 - Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press. Edited by Peter H. Wagschal & Robert D. Kahn.
  4. Education Automation Freeing the Scholar to Return to His Studies /by R. Buckminster Fuller ; Foreword by Charles D. Tenney.R. Buckminster Fuller - 1971 - Anchor Books.
     
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  5. Synergetics Explorations in the Geometry of Thinking [by] R. Buckminster Fuller in Collaboration with E.J. Applewhite. Pref. And Contribution by Arthur L. Loeb.R. Buckminster Fuller, Edgar J. Applewhite & Arthur Lee Loeb - 1975 - Macmillan.
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  6.  5
    (1 other version)No More Secondhand God: And Other Writings.Richard Buckminster Fuller - 1963 - Southern Illinois University Press.
    Vernon Sternberg of the S.I.U Press was responsible for bringing out the first edition of this collection of occasional pieces. In addition to the title piece, written in 1940, it includes other blank verses: “Machine Tools,” 1940; “The Historical Attempt by Man to Convert His Evolution from a Subjective to an Objective Process,” 1948; “Universal Requirements of a Dwelling Advantage,” 1917–62; “The Fuller Research Foundation,” 1946–51; A Comprehensive Anticipatory Design Science,” 1956; and two prose essays with geometrical diagrams and (...)
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  7.  7
    Nine Chains to the Moon.Richard Buckminster Fuller - 1963 - Southern Illinois University Press.
    The title of this book was chosen "to encourage and stimulate the broadest attitude toward thought... If, in imagination, all of the people of the world were to stand upon one another's shoulders, they would make nine complete chains between the earth and the moon. If it is not so far to the moon, then it is not so far to the limits - whatever, whenever, or wherever they may be." The only limits to our thinking, then, should be the (...)
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  8.  21
    Operating manual for spaceship earth.Richard Buckminster Fuller - 1969 - [Carbondale,: Southern Illinois University Press.
    In this essay on man Mr. Fuller expresses what may well be his penultimate view of the human condition. Here, in a mood at once philosophical and involved, Mr. Fuller traces man’s intellectual evolution and weighs his capability for survival on this magnificent craft, this Spaceship Earth, this superbly designed sphere of almost negligible dimension in the great vastness of space. Mr. Fuller is optimistic that man will survive and, through research and development and increased industrialization, generate (...)
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  9. General quotes from various sources.Buckminster Fuller - unknown
    If the doors of perception were cleansed, everything would appear to man as it is, infinite. - William Blake, Marriage of Heaven & Hell, Plate 14.
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  10.  62
    Buckminster Fuller as Captain of Spaceship Earth.Peder Anker - 2007 - Minerva 45 (4):417-434.
    Buckminster Fuller’s experiences in the Navy became a model for his ecological design projects and suggestions for the global management of ‘Spaceship Earth’. Inspired by technocratic ideas of the 1930s, Fuller envisaged, in the 1970s, an elitist world without politics, in which designers were at the helm, steering the planet out of its environmental crises.
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  11.  23
    BuckyWorks: Buckminster Fuller's Ideas for Today. Jay Baldwin.Alex Pang - 1998 - Isis 89 (1):170-171.
  12.  26
    Richard Buckminster Fuller's Artifacts and Texts as Precursors of the Age of Artificial Intelligence.Rebecca Dalvesco - 1998 - Semiotics:3-12.
  13.  10
    Richard Buckminster Fuller's Artifacts and Texts as Precursors of the Age of Artificial Intelligence: A Semiosic Inquiry.Rebecca Dalvesco - 1999 - Semiotics 23:1.
  14.  46
    The Philosophy of R. Buckminster Fuller.Derek A. Kelly - 1982 - International Philosophical Quarterly 22 (4):295-314.
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  15.  20
    Folding and Geometry: Buckminster Fuller’s Provocation of Thinking.Joachim Krausse & Michael Friedman - 2016 - In Wolfgang Schäffner & Michael Friedman (eds.), On Folding: Towards a New Field of Interdisciplinary Research. Bielefeld: Transcript Verlag. pp. 139-174.
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  16. Folding and geometry: Buckminster Fuller's provocative thinking.Michael Friedman & Joachim Krausse - 2016 - In Wolfgang Schäffner & Michael Friedman (eds.), On Folding: Towards a New Field of Interdisciplinary Research. Bielefeld: Transcript Verlag.
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  17.  13
    Tecno-estética e formação: especulações iniciais a partir de Simondon e Buckminster-Fuller.Emerson Freire - 2014 - Filosofia E Educação 6 (3):235-259.
    Dois pensadores, cada qual à sua maneira, incorporaram sempre em suas reflexões a técnica enquanto componente primordial de seus trabalhos: o inventor norte-americano Richard Buckminster Fuller e o filósofo francês Gilbert Simondon. Ambos têm ressonâncias na forma de pensar a tecnologia em relação ao social e na maneira de conceber o processo inventivo. Técnica e estética não estão em contraposição ou separadas para ambos, muito menos são componentes hierarquicamente inferiores do conhecimento. O presente artigo procura explorar um pouco (...)
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  18.  59
    Body-Vessel-matrix: Co-creative images of synergetic universe.Nancy Corson Carter - 1990 - Zygon 25 (2):151-165.
    In his essay “Goddesses of the Twenty‐first Century,” R. Buckminster Fuller's use of woman and goddess as metaphor suggests a fruitful source of images illuminating synergetic principles. Using five images, clustered as odyvessel‐matrix, the article suggests an epistemology and a heuristic for connecting the personal‐physical and the universal‐metaphysical. These images are (1) the Egyptian goddess Nut, (2) the Greek earth goddesses, (3) Neolithic Maltese goddess temples, (4) the double spiral, and (5) the Apollo Mission's Earth photographs. These images (...)
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  19.  10
    My Private Sky. Le metamorfosi della domesticità e i suoi significati politici nel XX secolo.Gianluca Bonaiuti - 2022 - Scienza and Politica. Per Una Storia Delle Dottrine 33 (65):79-125.
    During the 20th century, the format of domestic life became an explicit object of functional reworking and rewriting. Thanks to the industrialisation processes that affected it, the home entered the era of its technical reproducibility, becoming a container aimed at optimising the functions it is called upon to perform. The meanings that were associated with it in the bourgeois tradition of the previous century, first and foremost that of being the place of intimacy and family affection, underwent a significant transformation. (...)
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  20.  85
    On books and chemical elements.Santiago Alvarez, Joaquim Sales & Miquel Seco - 2008 - Foundations of Chemistry 10 (2):79-100.
    The history of the classification of chemical elements is reviewed from the point of view of a bibliophile. The influence that relevant books had on the development of the periodic table and, conversely, how it was incorporated into textbooks, treatises and literary works, with an emphasis on the Spanish bibliography are analyzed in this paper. The reader will also find unexpected connections of the periodic table with the Bible or the architect Buckminster Fuller.
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  21.  16
    Cinerama móvil.Miguel García González - 2022 - Human Review. International Humanities Review / Revista Internacional de Humanidades 11 (6):1-15.
    El espectáculo cinematográfico Cinerama es un referente en la tecnología de la gran pantalla. Gracias a Fred Waller y Hazard Reeves, Cinerama elevó su popularidad. Este hecho derivó en la creación de pabellones móviles itinerantes. Cinesa inició en España el desarrollo del Cinerama móvil, ante la falta de salas cinematográficas. Recurrieron, en 1966, a Emilio Pérez Piñero para la realización de un pabellón móvil que imitara Cinerama Dome, obra de Welton Becket, que siguió la patente de la cúpula geodésica de (...)
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  22. The Discovery of Discovery by Charles Tenney.Harold M. Kaplan, Ralph E. McCoy & Louis E. Hahn - 1990 - Upa.
    This anthology on creativity represents a lifetime of reading and study by the late Charles Dewey Tenney, a philosopher who had been a student of Alfred North Whitehead at Harvard. In a series of fourteen essays Tenney considers the various factors that can be identified in creativity, followed by the recorded testimony of philosophers, artists, historians, explorers, scientists and others, both theorists and practitioners. The contributors extend in time from Aristotle and Sophocles to Buckminster Fuller and May Sarton. (...)
     
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  23.  12
    Textures of the anthropocene: grain, vapor, ray.Katrin Klingan (ed.) - 2015 - Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
    Texts and textures: approaching an age of human-made nature through the particulate, the volatile, and the radiant. We have entered the Anthropocene era—a geological age of our own making, in which what we have understood to be nature is made by man. We need a new way to understand the dynamics of a new epoch. These volumes offer writings that approach the Anthropocene through the perspectives of grain, vapor, and ray—the particulate, the volatile, and the radiant. The first three volumes—each (...)
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  24.  23
    Why there was a Useful Plausible Analogy between Geodesic Domes and Spherical Viruses.Gregory J. Morgan - 2006 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 28 (2):215 - 235.
    In 1962, Donald Caspar and Aaron Klug published their classic theory of virus structure. They developed their theory with an explicit analogy between spherical viruses and Buckminster Fuller's geodesic domes. In this paper, I use the spherical virus-geodesic dome case to develop an account of analogy and deductive analogical inference based on the notion of an isomorphism. I also consider under what conditions there is a good reason to claim an experimentally untested analogy is plausible.
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  25.  36
    Mind: scarlet ocean.Emanuel Dimas de Melo Pimenta - 2006 - Technoetic Arts 4 (2):117-127.
    A new type of neuronal cell was discovered a few years ago: the mirror neurons. Their existence is a disturbing fact for our conceptions of intelligence and memory, giving to the whole universe of mind understanding a new logical framework. The impact of such a discovery on our concept of aesthetics and philosophy of thought makes us to recall Peirce, Lupasco, Buckminster Fuller launching ourselves to field folds, the super-string model or black holes among other non-linear time and (...)
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  26.  27
    Swamplab.Marleen Wynants - forthcoming - AI and Society:1-4.
    ‘SWAMPLAB’ is a strong case for intuitive insights through arts, sciences, and technologies to engage the self and establish meaningful social interactions including humans and non-humans. While zigzagging through processes of privatization, globalization, ecological, economic, social and political challenges, the power of such residencies or labs stems from the interplay with the local context and its habitants, in this case, nature reserve De Zegge, a 111 hectares swamp in the Northern part of Belgium. Mediation and participation are a core condition (...)
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  27.  41
    Smart Grid: The possibility to increase connectivity through a system of individual energy sharing.Sarah Ciracì - 2012 - Technoetic Arts 10 (1):109-114.
    This article is a reflection of the project ‘Welcome Aboard’, which I collaborated on in 2011, with two scientists Nicola Armaroli (Ist. ISOF/CNR, Bologna and Molecular Photoscience Group, Bologna) and Vincenzo Balzani (Department of Chemistry G. Ciamician, University of Bologna). The video establishes a dialogue based on Buckminster Fuller’s ‘World Game’ where they offer possible scenarios for our planet running under renewable energy sources. Ultimately, a democratic system of energy sharing, between consumers and suppliers, was proposed to be (...)
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  28.  9
    Engineering Hubris: Adam Smith and the Quest for the Perfect Machine.Scott Forschler - 2013 - In Diane P. Michelfelder, Natasha McCarthy & David E. Goldberg (eds.), Philosophy and Engineering: Reflections on Practice, Principles and Process. Dordrecht: Springer. pp. 267-277.
    I describe several historical cases of engineers or inventors obsessed with perfecting their products, illustrating how in some of those cases the perfectionist impulse led to tremendously valuable innovation, while in others to disaster, or at least to failure of the project to make the mark in history it otherwise could have. The psychological tendency towards perfecting an instrument for achieving some telos beyond what is pragmatically necessary or even desirable was diagnosed by Adam Smith, and may always be a (...)
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  29.  35
    The Case of Fuller vs Kuhn.Steve Fuller - 2004 - Social Epistemology 18 (1):3-49.
    I do not deny that Fuller is often right on the mark, but there comes a point when such relentless all‐round deprecation gets on one’s nerves. Roberto Torretti When as an undergraduate I first re...
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  30. A Fuller Vision of Thomas Kuhn: Response to Roth and Mirowski.Steve Fuller - 2001 - History of the Human Sciences 14 (2):111-117.
  31.  2
    Thomas Fuller's The holy state and the profane state.Thomas Fuller - 1938 - New York: Columbia University Press. Edited by Maximilian Graff Walten.
    I. Introduction, notes, and appendix -- II. A facsimile of the first edition, 1642, reduced in size.
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  32. The Principles of Social Order Selected Essays of Lon L. Fuller /Edited, with an Introd. By Kenneth I. Winston. --. --.Lon L. Fuller & Kenneth I. Winston - 1981 - Duke University Press, 1981.
     
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  33.  86
    Thomas Kuhn: A Philosophical History for Our Times.Steve Fuller - 2000 - University of Chicago Press.
    This work discusses whether Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions was revolutionary. Steve Fuller argues that Kuhn held a profoundly conservative view of science and how one ought to study its history.
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  34. Post Truth: Knowledge as a Power Game.Steve Fuller - 2018 - New York, USA: Anthem Press.
    'Post-truth', Oxford Dictionary's 2016 word of the year, appears to cover only the turn away from reason in contemporary politics. In fact the truth behind 'post-truth' is historically and philosophically more complex. As Fuller shows in this book, it reaches into the nature of knowledge itself.
  35.  18
    Philosophy of science and its discontents.Steve Fuller - 1989 - Boulder: Westview Press.
    The most important and exciting recent development in the philosophy of science is its merging with the sociology of scientific knowledge. Here is the first text book to make this development available.
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  36.  21
    A New Start For The Humanities Is Required For The 21st Century: A Debate Among Steve Fuller, Ronald Schleifer And Robert Markley.Steve Fuller, Ronald Schleifer & Robert Markley - 2009 - Danish Yearbook of Philosophy 44 (1):109-122.
  37.  75
    The Educated Woman in America. Selected Writings of Catherine Beecher, Margaret Fuller and M. Carey Thomas.Margaret Fuller, M. Carey Thomas, Barbara M. Cross & Catherine Beecher - 1966 - British Journal of Educational Studies 14 (3):103-104.
  38.  2
    (1 other version)The principles of social order: selected essays of Lon L. Fuller.Lon Luvois Fuller - 1981 - Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press. Edited by Kenneth I. Winston.
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  39.  56
    Kuhn vs. Popper: The Struggle for the Soul of Science.Steve Fuller - 2004 - Columbia University Press.
    Thomas Kuhn's _Structure of Scientific Revolutions_ has sold over a million copies in more than twenty languages and has remained one of the ten most cited academic works for the past half century. In contrast, Karl Popper's seminal book _The Logic of Scientific Discovery_ has lapsed into relative obscurity. Although the two men debated the nature of science only once, the legacy of this encounter has dominated intellectual and public discussions on the topic ever since. Almost universally recognized as the (...)
  40.  67
    The sociology of intellectual life: the career of the mind in and around the academy.Steve Fuller - 2009 - London: SAGE.
    The Sociology of Intellectual Life outlines a social theory of knowledge for the 21st century. Steve Fuller deals directly with a world in which it is no longer taken for granted that universities and academics are the best places and people to embody the life of the mind. While Fuller defends academic privilege, he takes very seriously the historic divergences between academics and intellectuals, attending especially to the different features of knowledge production that they value."--BOOK JACKET.
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  41. Social Epistemology.Steve Fuller - 1990 - Erkenntnis 33 (1):131-135.
     
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  42. The Morality of Law.Lon L. Fuller - 1964 - Ethics 76 (3):225-228.
     
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  43.  13
    Science.Steve Fuller - 1997 - Minneapolis: Routledge.
    In this challenging and provocative book, Steve Fuller contends that our continuing faith in science in the face of its actual history is best understood as the secular residue of a religiously inspired belief in divine providence. Our faith in science is the promise of a life as it shall be, as science will make it one day. Just as men once put their faith in God's activity in the world, so we now travel to a land promised by (...)
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  44.  28
    The governance of science: ideology and the future of the open society.Steve Fuller - 2000 - Philadelphia: Open University Press.
    This ground-breaking text offers a fresh perspective on the governance of science from the standpoint of social and political theory. Science has often been seen as the only institution that embodies the elusive democratic ideal of the 'open society'. Yet, science remains an elite activity that commands much more public trust than understanding, even though science has become increasingly entangled with larger political and economic issues.
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  45. The Philosophy of Science and Technology Studies.Steve Fuller - 2005 - New York: Routledge.
    As the field of Science and Technology Studies has become more established, it has increasingly hidden its philosophical roots. While the trend is typical of disciplines striving for maturity, Steve Fuller, a leading figure in the field, argues that STS has much to lose if it abandons philosophy. In his characteristically provocative style, he offers the first sustained treatment of the philosophical foundations of STS and suggests fruitful avenues for further research. With stimulating discussions of the Science Wars, the (...)
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  46.  15
    (1 other version)Preparing for life in humanity 2.0.Steve Fuller - 2012 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Developing directly from Fuller's recent book Humanity 2.0, this is the first book to seriously consider what a 'post-' or 'trans'-' human state of being might mean for who we think we are, how we live, what we believe and what we aim to be.
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  47.  12
    Knowledge: The Philosophical Quest in History.Steve Fuller - 2014 - Routledge.
    The theory of knowledge, or epistemology, is often regarded as a dry topic that bears little relation to actual knowledge practices. Knowledge: The Philosophical Quest in History addresses this perception by showing the roots, developments and prospects of modern epistemology from its beginnings in the nineteenth century to the present day. Beginning with an introduction to the central questions and problems in theory of knowledge, Steve Fuller goes on to demonstrate that contemporary epistemology is enriched by its interdisciplinarity, analysing (...)
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  48. The Confounding Question of Confounding Causes in Randomized Trials.Jonathan Fuller - 2019 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 70 (3):901-926.
    It is sometimes thought that randomized study group allocation is uniquely proficient at producing comparison groups that are evenly balanced for all confounding causes. Philosophers have argued that in real randomized controlled trials this balance assumption typically fails. But is the balance assumption an important ideal? I run a thought experiment, the CONFOUND study, to answer this question. I then suggest a new account of causal inference in ideal and real comparative group studies that helps clarify the roles of confounding (...)
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  49.  24
    Humanity 2.0: what it means to be human past, present and future.Steve Fuller - 2011 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Social thinkers in all fields are faced with one unavoidable question: What does it mean to be human in the 21st century? This ambitious and groundbreaking book provides the first synthesis of historical, philosophical and sociological insights needed to address this question in a thoughtful and creative manner.
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  50. The Risk GP Model: The standard model of prediction in medicine.Jonathan Fuller & Luis J. Flores - 2015 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 54:49-61.
    With the ascent of modern epidemiology in the Twentieth Century came a new standard model of prediction in public health and clinical medicine. In this article, we describe the structure of the model. The standard model uses epidemiological measures-most commonly, risk measures-to predict outcomes (prognosis) and effect sizes (treatment) in a patient population that can then be transformed into probabilities for individual patients. In the first step, a risk measure in a study population is generalized or extrapolated to a target (...)
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