Sunday, 25 April 2010

UPDATES / Kathrine Anker


Wave–particle duality
In physics and chemistry, wave–particle duality is the concept that all matter exhibits both wave-like and particle-like properties. Being a central concept of quantum mechanics, this duality addresses the inadequacy of classical concepts like "particle" and "wave" in fully describing the behavior of quantum-scale objects. Orthodox interpretations of quantum mechanics explain this ostensible paradox as a fundamental property of the Universe, while alternative interpretations explain the duality as an emergent, second-order consequence of various limitations of the observer. This treatment focuses on explaining the behavior from the perspective of the widely used Copenhagen interpretation, in which wave–particle duality is one aspect of the concept of complementarity, that a phenomenon can be viewed in one way or in another, but not both simultaneously.

Holographic paradigm
The holographic paradigm is a theory based on the work of David Bohm and Karl Pribram and extrapolated from two misinterpretated ideas:
That the universe is in some sense a holographic structure — proposed by David Bohm
That consciousness is dependent on holographic structure — proposed by Karl Pribram
This paradigm posits that theories using holographic structures may lead to a unified understanding of consciousness and the universe.

QuantumHolography
people.bu.edu/alexserg/QuantumHolography.pdf

Morin Hologramatic Principle
www.resilience-engineering.org/REPapers/Rigaud_Guarnieri_R.pdf
www.kjf.ca/Complex%20Thinking.pdf

Generative Anthropology
http://www.anthropoetics.ucla.edu/Gaintro.htm

Cultural Semiotics
http://filserver.arthist.lu.se/kultsem/semiotics/kult_sem_engb.html

Stream of consciousness
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stream_of_consciousness

The three pillars of transdisciplinarity -- levels of Reality, the logic of the included middle, and complexity -- determine the methodology of transdisciplinary research

Transdisciplinarity
Foundations of transdisciplinarity, Manfred A. Max-Neef T

Basarab Nicolescu, TRANSDISCIPLINARITY – PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE

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