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1,450 results for "philosophy of information" — page 7 of 73
ZD_5_02 — Digital Preservation and the Longevity of Knowledge
Digital preservation — the set of policies, strategies, and actions required to ensure continued access to digital information over time — addresses one of the great paradoxes of the information age: humanity is producin
ZD_5_10 — Information Retrieval: Search Engines, Ranking, and Vector Search
Information retrieval (IR) is the science of searching for information in a collection of documents, metadata, databases, or the World Wide Web — finding material (usually text documents) of an unstructured nature (usual
ZD_5_15 — Information & Hybrid Warfare
Information warfare and hybrid warfare describe the integration of military and non-military tools — cyberattacks, disinformation campaigns, economic coercion, proxy forces, diplomatic pressure, and conventional military
ZD_5_14 — Data Visualization: The Science and Art of Visual Communication
Data visualization — the graphical representation of information and data — sits at the intersection of statistics, cognitive science, design, and computer science. The field's modern foundations were laid by Jacques Ber
ZD_4_10 — Complexity Theory in Biology — Kauffman, Wolfram, Edge of Chaos
The application of complexity theory to biology — the study of how complex, adaptive, self-organizing structures and behaviors emerge in living systems from the interactions of simpler components — has been one of the mo
L_1_15 — Out of Africa Alternatives: Multiregional, Assimilation, and Southern Dispersal Models
The origin and dispersal of anatomically modern humans (Homo sapiens) remains one of the most actively debated topics in paleoanthropology. The dominant model — the Recent African Origin (RAO) or "Out of Africa" hypothes
Y_4_15 — Sensory Overload and Information Flooding: Excess as Altered State
Sensory overload — the state that arises when sensory input exceeds the brain's capacity for orderly processing — represents the mirror image of sensory deprivation as a pathway to altered consciousness. While deprivatio
H_3_18 — Digital Information Control and Algorithmic Censorship
The shift from print and broadcast media to digital platforms (c. 2000–present) has created new mechanisms of information control that differ fundamentally from historical censorship. Unlike state censorship, which remov
H_4_25 — Information Warfare and Historical Revisionism: Modern Threats
Information warfare — the strategic use of information (and misinformation) to achieve political, military, or economic objectives — has entered a new and qualitatively different phase in the digital era. While propagand
H_4_31 — Media Ownership Concentration & Information Control
The progressive consolidation of media ownership in the United States and globally since the 1980s — from approximately 50 companies controlling the majority of American media in 1983 to effectively 6 major conglomerates
H_4_32 — Information Warfare, Propaganda & Manufactured Consent
Information warfare — the deliberate use of information and communication systems to gain strategic advantage — is as old as organized conflict, but the modern era has industrialized it. From Edward Bernays's founding of
H_4_11 — Classified Science and Declassified Programs
Governments routinely classify scientific and technical research on national security grounds, creating vast bodies of knowledge that are inaccessible to the public, the scientific community, and democratic oversight for
P_3_13 — Kant: Transcendental Idealism and the Limits of Reason
Immanuel Kant (1724-1804), professor at the University of Königsberg in East Prussia, produced what is widely regarded as the most transformative body of work in modern Western philosophy. His three Critiques — the Criti
P_3_04 — Phenomenology — Consciousness and the Structure of Experience
Phenomenology, founded by Edmund Husserl at the turn of the 20th century, is the systematic study of the structures of consciousness and the phenomena that appear within it. Through its central methodological innovations
P_3_07 — Aristotle — Natural Philosophy, Cosmology, and Legacy
Aristotle (384–322 BCE) was a Greek philosopher and polymath whose works constitute the single most influential body of thought in the history of Western and Islamic intellectual tradition. A student of Plato for twenty
P_3_21 — Decolonial Philosophy
Decolonial philosophy (or decoloniality) is a critical intellectual tradition originating primarily from Latin American scholars that analyzes the enduring structures of coloniality — the patterns of power, knowledge, an
P_4_12 — Mesoamerican Philosophy
Mesoamerican philosophy refers to the systematic thought traditions of pre-Columbian civilizations — primarily the Nahua (Aztec/Mexica) and Maya — as reconstructed from colonial-era sources (Nahuatl-language texts collec
P_4_17 — African Philosophy & Ubuntu: Communal Personhood and Relational Ethics
Ubuntu — often rendered as "I am because we are" (umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu in Zulu/Xhosa: "a person is a person through other persons") — represents the most widely discussed concept in contemporary African philosophy, e
P_4_18 — African Philosophy: Ubuntu, Sage Tradition, and Ethnophilosophy
African philosophy encompasses a diverse set of intellectual traditions — from pre-colonial oral philosophical systems preserved through proverbs, cosmologies, and sage discourse, through the anti-colonial movements of N
P_4_10 — Islamic Philosophy — Al-Kindi to Ibn Rushd and Beyond
Islamic philosophy (falsafa) represents one of the great intellectual traditions in human history, flourishing from the 9th through 12th centuries CE and continuing through later thinkers like Mulla Sadra into the modern
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