Description
A mathematical model of meaning that captures the dynamics and diversity of meaning-oriented agents.
In Mathematical Models of Meaning, Paul Kockelman offers answers to the following kinds of questions: What is meaning? What is the relation between meaning, information, value, and purpose? What ingredients are necessary for a system to exhibit meaning? What behaviors, and capacities for behavior, are particular to meaning-oriented agents? Is there a relatively simple mathematical model that can adequately capture the dynamics—and diversity—of meaning-oriented agents? And finally, how can we best bridge the divide between interpretive paradigms that are qualitative and context rich and formal methods that are quantitative and domain general?
Partially grounded in a pragmatist approach, this book rethinks the semiotic, statistical, and logical currents of Charles Sanders Peirce’s thought in relation to more recent developments in allied traditions. Putting possible worlds, as well as social relations, at the center of significance, it focuses on the emergence of meaningful behavior among relatively distributed agents that choose in real time, learn over developmental time, or evolve over phylogenetic time.
-
- 電子書籍
- 幼い皇后様【タテヨミ】第4話 picc…
-
- 電子書籍
- 社長パパが追っかけてくる【タテヨミ】第…
-
- 電子書籍
- 手ごわい大富豪【分冊】 1巻 ハーレク…
-
- 電子書籍
- とんでもスキルで異世界放浪メシ 1 ガ…



