Results for 'Kazemzadeh Firuz'

6 found
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  1.  15
    The baha'is in iran: Twenty years of repression.Kazemzadeh Firuz - 2000 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 67 (2).
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  2.  36
    Apophenoetics: Virtual pattern recognition, the origins of creativity and augmenting the evolution of self.Max Kazemzadeh - 2012 - Technoetic Arts 10 (1):115-123.
    Significance appears as an alignment of stimuli, from a sea of randomly and methodically inputted or stored content into what we might call patterns in the mind. What Klaus Conrad refers to as apophenia, Micheal Shermer as patternicity and Jung as synchronicity, significance serves as synaptic moments recognizing formal elements of a thought, in many cases as individualized personal and possibly ethnocentric experience packets in the mind that have some significance to us. Finding significance in something, or associative significance between (...)
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  3.  23
    Psychic systems and metaphysical machines: experiencing behavioural prediction with neural networks.Max B. Kazemzadeh - 2010 - Technoetic Arts 8 (2):189-198.
    We are living in a time of meta-organics and post-biology, where we perceive everything in our world as customizable and changeable. Modelling biology within a technological context allows us to investigate GEO-volutionary alternatives/alterations to our original natural systems, where augmentation and transmutation become standards in search of overall betterment (Genetically Engineered Organics). Our expectations for technology exceeds ubiquitous access and functional perfection and enters the world of technoetics, where our present hyper-functional, immersively multi-apped, borderline-prosthetic, global village devices fail to satiate (...)
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  4.  16
    Postnational technollaboration within the postbiotanical village (an Apophenoetic Prophecy).Max Kazemzadeh - 2013 - Technoetic Arts 11 (3):253-261.
    Postnational, or after or more than national, is a world that connects the international with the local. Technollaboration, is how creative digital communities use technology to improve methods and environments for collaboration. Postbiotanical, after or more than biotanical, represents the future of human-centric collectives around farming and urban living and sustainability. Village, is ambiguous and raises the question how large is local, and how does a village-centric view impact the way we treat each other? Art traditionally functions as an environment (...)
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  5.  15
    Evil lords, benign historians: strongman politics in medieval India and Renaissance Florence.Vasileios Syros - 2019 - Intellectual History Review 29 (1):11-34.
    Recent developments in Europe and the United States (US) attest to an increasing fascination with and nostalgia for the strong leaders of the past – especially those that emerged in the aftermath of the creation of nation states and during the period between the First World War and the end of the Cold War era. Considerations of the “strongman syndrome” have a long lineage in premodern European and Islamic political thought. The famous Italian humanist Leonardo Bruni (ca. 1370–1444), for example, (...)
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  6.  37
    The social properties of media arts in an open source era.Xiaoying Juliette Yuan - 2012 - Technoetic Arts 10 (2-3):297-300.
    ‘Six Degrees of Separation’ is analogous to what we have come to know as the origins of the ‘social network’ (social network service, social network software or SNS). In our time, the application of the ‘social network’ has become a common mode of living shared ubiquitously by different societies, cultures and communities. With the popularity of open source technology, the creation of social networks is no longer the exclusive domain of professional computer programmers. In China, social networking has also become (...)
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