Mind and Nature: A Necessary UnityBantam Books, 1988 - 255 pagina's A celebratory trade paper edition of a mass market classic of contemporary thought in which Bateson exhorts us to learn to "think as Nature thinks" if we are to live in harmony on this planet. |
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Pagina 12
... formal characteristics that they had joyfully found in the crab . They had the idea that formal symmetry , repetition of parts , mod- ulated repetition , and so on were what teacher wanted . But the spiral was not bilaterally ...
... formal characteristics that they had joyfully found in the crab . They had the idea that formal symmetry , repetition of parts , mod- ulated repetition , and so on were what teacher wanted . But the spiral was not bilaterally ...
Pagina 180
... formal resemblance between creatures illus- trated the connectedness within the Great Chain of Being , and these connections were logical , not genealogical , links . Be all that as it may , the jumped conclusion from formal re ...
... formal resemblance between creatures illus- trated the connectedness within the Great Chain of Being , and these connections were logical , not genealogical , links . Be all that as it may , the jumped conclusion from formal re ...
Pagina 196
... formal pattern the embryos of ancestral forms more closely than the formal patterns of adults will resemble those of ancestral adults . This is far from what Haeckel and Her- bert Spencer dreamed of in their notion that embryology would ...
... formal pattern the embryos of ancestral forms more closely than the formal patterns of adults will resemble those of ancestral adults . This is far from what Haeckel and Her- bert Spencer dreamed of in their notion that embryology would ...
Inhoudsopgave
II | 12 |
Multiple Versions of the World | 69 |
IV | 95 |
Copyright | |
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abstract action animal answer appearance become behavior believe called cause Chapter characteristics circuit combined communication comparative complex components connects consider contains context contrast course create creatures DAUGHTER describe determined difference direction effect energy evolution example experience explanation fact FATHER follows formal genetic give given hand happens human ideas important individual interaction internal language learning limited living logical typing look matter mean mental process messages mind move natural necessary never object occur organism pattern perception perhaps phenomena pieces possible present principle problem quantity question random relations relationship seems selection sense sequence sexual reproduction side simple single somatic change sort species step stochastic surely tautology theory things thought tion true turn universe variable whole