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Cybernetics and Human Knowing, Volume 13
Volume 13, Number 1, 2006
- Jeanette Bopry:

Foreword: Semiotics and Systems: Meaning, Causality and Power. 5-6 - Menno Hulswit:

A Semiotic Account of Causation. 7-17 - Chris Miles:

The Excluded Environment: Preliminary remarks towards a systems theory of literature. 19-33 - Egon Noe, Hugo Fjelsted Alrøe:

Combining Luhmann and Actor-Network Theory to See Farm Enterprises as Self-organizing Systems. 34-48 - Michael Schiltz:

Power and the Third Paradox. 49-70 - Ranulph Glanville:

A (Cybernetic) Musing: Invisibility and Silence. 71-80 - Ern Reynolds:

The Heaviest Hammer in Your Bag. 81-85 - Phillip Guddemi, Frede Stjernfelt:

Book Reviews. 86-103
Volume 13, Number 2, 2006
- Søren Brier:

Foreword: Luhmann Observed and Critiqued. 5-6 - Ole Thyssen:

Epistemology as Communication Theory: A Critique of Niklas Luhmann's Theory of the Vanished World. 7-24 - Dirk Baecker:

Niklas Luhmann in the Society of the Computer. 25-40 - Anders la Cour:

The Concept of Environment in Systems Theory. 41-55 - Lars Qvortrup:

Structural Coupling-a Problematic Concept. 56-58 - Ole Thyssen:

The Environment in Systems Theory: Response to Anders la Cour. 59-61 - Anders la Cour:

Relations beyond information. 62-63 - Erkki Sevänen:

A Long-Term Contrast in Systemic Sociology. 64-93 - Louis H. Kauffman:

Virtual Boundaries. 94-104 - David Schmaltz:

Thinking Like a Computer. 105-108 - Ranulph Glanville:

Dark Hero of the Information Age: In Search of Norbert Wiener, Father of Cybernetics. 109-112
Volume 13, Numbers 3-4, 2006
- Søren Brier:

Foreword: 'Blind spots'. 5-8 - Jean-Louis Le Moigne:

Modeling For Reasoning Socio-Economic Behaviors. 9-26 - Paul Downes:

Newtonian Space: The 'Blind Spot' In Newell and Simon's Information Processing Paradigm. 27-57 - Phillip Guddemi:

Breaking the Concept of Power (and Redescribing its Domain): Batesonian and Autopoietic Perspectives. 58-73 - Anis Pervez:

Cybernetic Self and Self-Observation in Email. 74-86 - Itay Shani:

Narcissistic Sensations and Intentional Directedness: How Second-Order Cybernetics Helps Dissolve the Tension Between the Egocentric Character of Sensory Information and the (Seemingly) World-Centered Character of Cognitive Representations. 87-110 - Torkild Thellefsen, Bent Sørensen, Christian Andersen:

Significance-effects, Semeiotics and Brands. 111-134 - Ranulph Glanville:

A Cybernetic Musing: The IFSR, diagrams and inclusive logic, or- [Both [either [either/or] or [both/and]], and [both [both/and] and [either/or]]]. 135-143 - Raúl Espejo:

Reflections on Power, Democracy and Communications. 144-152 - Phillip Guddemi:

A possible prolegomena to a metagrammar of genes and language. 153-155 - Ranulph Glanville:

Life is a Verb. 156-160 - John Deely:

Let us not lose sight of the forest for the trees ... A commentary on Frederik Stjernfelt's review of the Four Ages of Understanding history of semiotics within the history of philosophy. 161-193

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