This bookcomprises of papers from the second of two workshops involving a group of scholars united in the conviction that the great diversity of knowledge claims and practices for which we have evidence must be taken seriously in their own terms rather than by the yardstick of Western modernity.
This bookcomprises of papers from the second of two workshops involving a group of scholars united in the conviction that the great diversity of knowledge claims and practices for which we have evidence must be taken seriously in their own terms rather than by the yardstick of Western modernity.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Willard McCarty works on relations among the interpretative human and computational sciences. He is Editor of Interdisciplinary Science Reviews and founding convenor of the online seminar for digital humanities, Humanist (1987- ). His current project is a study of what can be done with artificial intelligence to improve curiosity's well- being. Geoffrey E. R. Lloyd is based at the Needham Research Institute in Cambridge. The most recent of his many general cross-cultural studies of human cognitive experience is Intelligence and Intelligibility (2020). Aparecida Vilaça is a social anthropologist from Museu Nacional, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro. She has been working with the Wari', an indigenous Amazonian people, for the last thirty years. Her main research themes are cannibalism, warfare, conversion to Christianity, schooling and mathematical knowledge.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface 1. Introduction 2. Philosophical engagements with distant sciences 3. Mongolian map-making as practice 4. Star canoes, voyaging worlds 5. Counting generation(s) 6. A pagan arithmetic: unstable sets in indigenous Amazonia 7. As perceived, not as known: digital enquiry and the art of intelligence 8. Inventing Artificial Intelligence in Ethiopia 9. Mereological themes in cuneiform worldmaking 10. Monteverdi's unruly women and their Amazonian sisters
Preface 1. Introduction 2. Philosophical engagements with distant sciences 3. Mongolian map-making as practice 4. Star canoes, voyaging worlds 5. Counting generation(s) 6. A pagan arithmetic: unstable sets in indigenous Amazonia 7. As perceived, not as known: digital enquiry and the art of intelligence 8. Inventing Artificial Intelligence in Ethiopia 9. Mereological themes in cuneiform worldmaking 10. Monteverdi's unruly women and their Amazonian sisters
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