Literature/1950/Wiener

< Literature < 1950
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Wiener, Norbert (1950). The Human Use of Human Beings. 2nd ed., Houghton Milfflin, 1954.


The hour is very late, and the choice of good and evil knocks at our door.


Excerpts

Preface

1) Cybernetics in History

2) Progress and Entropy

3) Rigidity and Learning: Two Patterns of Communicative Behaviour

4) The mechanism and history of Language

5) Organization as the Message

6) Law and Communication

7) Communication, Secrecy and Social Policy

8) Role of the Intellectual and the Scientist

9) The First and Second Industrial Revolution

10) Some Communication Machines and Their Future

11) Language, Confusion and Jam

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        The shade of the bar looks invariant in isolation but variant in context, in (favor of) sharp contrast with the color gradient background, hence an innate illusion we have to reasonably interpret and overcome as well as the mirage. Such variance appearing seasonably from context to context may not only be the case with our vision but worldview in general in practice indeed, whether a priori or a posteriori. Perhaps no worldview from nowhere, without any point of view or prejudice at all!

        Ogden & Richards (1923) said, "All experience ... is either enjoyed or interpreted ... or both, and very little of it escapes some degree of interpretation."

        H. G. Wells (1938) said, "The human individual is born now to live in a society for which his fundamental instincts are altogether inadequate."

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