Conferences Books
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Used price: $55.20

excellent description of system mathematicsReview Date: 1999-04-23
Used price: $44.97

an effective reactionReview Date: 1999-05-26

A good little tractReview Date: 2008-04-29
This pamphlet answers the question of why you should be a Christian, and was written by the eminent Mennonite theologian, Paul Peachey (b.1918). Overall, I found it to be a good little tract, one that is quite interesting and thought-provoking.
Used price: $13.25

An Uncommon Interdiciplinary CollectionReview Date: 2000-03-27
Used price: $7.42

Great book with excellent research.Review Date: 2008-09-21

Used price: $8.24

Good collectionReview Date: 2006-12-26
Gore, with whom I don't often agree, warned that the new regime of patenting/licensing/copyright amounted to "selling the tree of knowledge to Wall Street." His warnings went largely unheeded (by him as well, evidently).
The collection here reminds us of what we are losing as the public domain is being eroded by privatization.
Used price: $99.98

A new kind of science...Review Date: 2002-07-31
Anticipatory systems acknowledge that real processes, particularly life, do not obey causal laws required by our present 'religion' of reductionism. This can be seen in all aspects of science whether one looks at attempts at cybernetics, algorithmic information theory, physics or biology (to name a few). We have consistently run up against the same roadblocks to progress since our present way of thinking excludes the possibility of ever answering some very basic questions.
There is a lot of interest here from Dubois' works in hyperinclusion (although I do not agree with his interpretation of Rosen) to Ekdahl's excellent research on the link between induction and anticipatory systems. Nadin's work is quite good for someone just beginning to get interested in this area. Many aspects of science that are complete mysteries now begin to make much more sense whether it is the Feynman-Wheeler theories of QED, understanding Shnoll's results or learning theories in general when one sees that the problem is our clinging to linear causality.
It is quite interesting to contrast this to Wolfram's pinnacle of ironic science, "A New Kind of Science" - he has no 'new' science, just more of the old stuff. Unfortunately his money has helped him generate lots of hype about fluff when there is much more exciting and genuinely new work being done as it has in the past: quietly and thoughtfully.

Interesting mix of topicsReview Date: 2006-04-22
The book opens with an excellent introduction to general issues in quantum gravity, this is the most basic chapter in the book the rest of it is considerably more advanced. Following this there are five major sections: quantum mechanics and measurements, the issue of time, strings, other approaches to quantum gravity and topology and black holes.
At a high level the talks cover issues in quantum mechanics, quantum cosmology and quantum gravity. By and large the discussions don't revolve around specific approaches to quantum gravity, but rather they focus on more general issues such as topology change or decoherence. Two topics stand out as receiving exceptional coverage, quantum cosmology and the problem of time. There is definitely a lot of material that isn't frequently covered.
I found most of the talks to be quite interesting. One of the really nice features of the book is that it often contains the question and answer sessions that followed the talks. Although I liked this book, given the nature of the contents and the price I can't really recommend it for purchase.

A vanished eraReview Date: 2003-09-01
Used price: $0.68
Collectible price: $12.50

The Conference of the BirdsReview Date: 2000-05-05
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