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Cybernetics and Human Knowing, Volume 5
Volume 5, Number 1, 1998
- Claus Emmeche:

Defining life as a semiotic phenomenon. 3-17 - David J. Depew, Bruce H. Weber:

What does natural selection have to be like in order to work with self-organization? 18-31 - Jesper Hoffmeyer:

Surfaces inside surfaces. On the origin of agency and life. 33-42 - Robert Vallée:

Cognition et Systeme, Essai d'Epistemo-praxeologie. 44-46 - Robert Vallée:

An introduction to 'Epistemo-praxiology'. 47-55 - Ranulph Glanville:

A (cybernetic) musing: varieties of variety? 57-62 - Louis H. Kauffman:

Virtual logic - the calculus of indications. 63-68
Volume 5, Number 2, 1998
- Søren Brier:

Foreword. 3 - Peter Bøgh Andersen:

WWW as self-organizing system. 5-41 - Joy Murray:

Information, communication and technology - what can second order cybernetics contribute to the literacy debate. 43-57 - Erminia Vaccari:

Knowledge as modelling. 59-72 - Louis H. Kauffman:

Virtual logic - self-reference and the calculus of indications. 75-82 - Ranulph Glanville:

A (cybernetic) musing: the gestation of second order cybernetics, 1968-1975 - a personal account. 85-95
Volume 5, Number 3, 1998
- Lucas D. Introna:

Language and social autopoiesis. 3-17 - Alfonso Reyes, Roberto Zarama:

The process of embodying distinctions - a re-construction of the process of learning. 19-33 - Frederick Steier:

Dialogue and second-order cybernetics: A mutual affinity. 35-36 - Marianne Kristiansen, Jørgen Bloch-Poulsen:

Productive dialogues - golddigging midwives. 37-54 - Ranulph Glanville:

A (cybernetic) musing: variety and creativity. 56-62 - Louis H. Kauffman:

Virtual Logic - symbolic logic and the calculus of indications. 63-70
Volume 5, Number 4, 1998
- Pedro C. Marijuán:

The FIS (Foundations of Information Science) initiative: a presentation. 3-6 - G. G. Scarrott:

The formulation of a science of information: an engineering perspective on the natural properties of information. 7-17 - Pedro C. Marijuán, Morris Villarroel:

On information theory stumbling-blocks: some biological considerations about the concepts of 'sequence', 'stability' and 'hierarchy'. 19-29 - Ray Paton:

The ecologies of hereditary information. 31-44 - Michael Conrad:

Physical-biological roots of information processing. 46-59 - Ranulph Glanville, Sima Sengupta, Gail Forey:

A (cybernetic) musing: language and science in the language of science. 61-70 - Louis H. Kauffman:

Virtual logic - The Smullyan Machine. 71-80

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