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  1. Informationskompetenz - Basiskompetenz in der Informationsgesellschaft : Proceedings des 7. Internationalen Symposiums für Informationswissenschaft (ISI 2000) (2000) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Mit dem Leitthema »lnformationskompetenz - Basiskompetenz in der Informationsgesellschaft« trägt das 7. Internationale Symposium für Informationswissenschaft der aktuellen Situation auf den elektronischen Informationsmärkten Rechnung. Informationskompetenz ist Voraussetzung dafür, wirklichen Nutzen aus den globalen Informationsangeboten zu ziehen. Immer mehr Informationsspezialisten werden gebraucht und gleichzeitig muss Informationskompetenz auch tatsächlich Basiskompetenz in unserer heutigen Informationsgesellschaft werden. Die Herausforderung ist interdisziplinär. Jenseits einer bloß technischen Ausrichtung ist z.B. sozioökonomisches, kognitiv-psychologisches, linguistisches, designerisch-ästhetisches Wissen verlangt, um Information erfolgreich erarbeiten zu können. Die 18 Artikel entsprechen der Bandbreite des Diskussionsstandes der Informationswissenschaft: Das Internet und das WWW sind Ausgangs- und Bezugspunkt vieler Arbeiten zu Informations- und Wissensmanagement, Informationswirtschaft, Verlags- und Bibliothekswesen, Wissensrepräsentation, Information Retrieval, Data/Text Mining sowie Hypertext/Multimedia
    Content
    Enthält die Beiträge: Thomas Mandl, Christa Womser-Hacker: Ein adaptives Information-Retrieval-Modell für Digitale Bibliotheken - Ilse Harms, Werner Schweibenz: Usability Engineering Methods for the Web Results From a Usability Study - Christian Wolff: Effektivität von Recherchen im WWW Vergleichende Evaluierung von Such- und Metasuchmaschinen - Rainer Hammwöhner: TransRouter revisited - Decision support in the routing of translation projects - Gerhard Rahmstorf: Wortmodell und Begriffssprache als Basis des semantischen Retrievals - Christian Schögl: Informationskompetenz am Beispiel einer szientometrischen Untersuchung zum Informationsmanagement - Otto Krickl, Elisabeth Milchrahm: Integrativer Ansatz zur Wissensbewertung - Gabriela Mußler, Harald Reiterer, Thomas M. Mann: INSYDER - Information Retrieval Aspects of a Business Intelligence System - C. Goller, J. Löning, T. Will, W. Wolff: Automatic Document Classification A thorough Evaluation of various Methods - Gerhard Heyer, Uwe Quasthoff, Christian Wolff: Aiding Web Searches by Statistical Classification Tools - Matthias N.0. Müller: Die virtuelle Fachbibliothek Sozialwissenschaften - Benno Homann: Das Dynamische Modell der Informationskompetenz (DYMIK) als Grundlage für bibliothekarische Schulungen - Gerhard Reichmann: Leistungsvergleiche zwischen wissenschaftlichen Bibliotheken - Willi Bredemeier, Woffigang G. Stock: Informationskompetenz europäischer Volkswirtschaften - Hermann Rösch: Internetportal, Unternehmensportal, Wissenschaftsportal Typologie und Funktionalität der wichtigsten Portalkonzeptionen - Harc Rittberger, Woffigang Semar: Regionale Elektronische Zeitungen: Qualitätskriterien und Evaluierung - Stephan Werner: Der Autor im digitalen Medium - ein notwendiges Konstrukt? - Dr. Jaroslav Susol: Access to information in electronic age - situation in Slovakia
    Theme
    Information
  2. Weltwissen - Wissenswelt : Das globale Netz von Text und Bild (2000) 0.02
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    Abstract
    WISSEN IST DIE RESSOURCE und der Produktionsfaktor des neuen Jahrtausends und längst schon Brennstoff der sich beschleunigenden Globalisierung. Wie erwerben und sortieren, vermitteln und nutzen wir Wissen, und wie hat die digitale Revolution den traditionellen Wissenserwerb verändert? Wie hat diese Visualisierung des Wissens unsere Gesellschaft umgestaltet, und wie sehen die neuen Schnittstellen zwischen Wissen und Handeln, zwischen Mensch und Computer aus? Zu diesen Fragen hat die »Akademie zum Dritten Jahrtausend«, Think Tank des Burda Verlags, am 3.-4.2.1999 in München einen internationalen Kongress veranstaltet und Fachleute und Vordenker aus alter Weit eingeladen, um die Konturen der heraufziehenden Zeit zu beleuchten. Vertreter aus Hirnforschung, Neurobiologie, Künstlicher Intelligenz-Forschung, Sozial-, Sprach- und Computerwissenschaft, Informationsdesign, Medientechnologie und Wirtschaftsmanagement diskutierten während eines Symposiums und in anwenderorientierten Workshops, die begleitet waren von einer Software- und DesignAusstellung. WELTWISSEN - WISSENSWELT. DAS GLOBALE NETZ VON TEXT UND BILD ist die um Originatbeiträge ergänzte und erweiterte Dokumentation dieser Bestandsaufnahme am Beginn des neuen Jahrtausends
    Theme
    Information
  3. ¬The impact of information (1995) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Discussion of the impact of information
    Source
    Information processing and management. 31(1995) no.4, S.455-498
    Theme
    Information
  4. Representation and exchange of knowledge as a basis of information processes : Proc. of the 5th Int. Research Forum in Information Science (IRFIS 5), Heidelberg, 5.-7.9.1983 (1984) 0.01
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    Theme
    Information
  5. ¬The structuring of information : proceedings of the 11th informatics conference (1991) 0.01
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    Footnote
    Rez. in: Journal of librarianship and information science 25(1993) no.1, S.51-53
    Theme
    Information
  6. Wege zum Wissen : Die menschengerechte Information. Proceedings (2002) 0.01
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    Theme
    Information
  7. Knowledge and communication : essays on the information chain (1991) 0.01
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    Abstract
    This collection of essays examines the information chain from author / creator to user. The chapters provide a basis for a consideration of policy information suppliers' policy towards knowledge acquisition
    Footnote
    Rez. in: Journal of documentation 47(1991) S.309-311 (J. Warner); Information processing and management 29(1993) no.4, S.524-525 (S. Edwards)
    Theme
    Information
  8. ¬The information future (1995) 0.01
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    Content
    Enthält die Beiträge: WOLF, M.T. u. R.B. MILLER: The information future: data, data, everywhere!; WOLFE, G.: Libraries on the superhighway: rest stop or roadkill?; AGRE, P.E.: Institutional circuity: thinking about the forms and uses of information; LYRIS, S.O.: Multiply and conquer; MASON, L.: The elephant and the net cruiser: regulating communication on the net; BRIN, D.: The Internet as a commons; MARTIN, M.S.: Problems in information transfer in the age of the computer; BARNES, J.: Information and unfictionable science; STARRS, P.F. u. HUNTSINGER, L.: The matrix, cyberpunk literature, and the apocalyptic landscapes of information technology; PRANSKY, J.: Robots: our future information intermediaries; CHISLENKO, A.: Intelligent information filters and enhanced reality; BARNES, S.: The impossible dream
    Source
    Information technology and libraries. 14(1995) no.4, S.219-269
    Theme
    Information
  9. Information, eine dritte Wirklichkeitsart neben Materie und Geist (1995) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Information, Materie und Geist werden hier in den verschiedenen Erscheinungsformen und Auswirkungen behandelt. Das Phänomen der Information wird als das verbindliche Element der Kultur betrachtet
    Theme
    Information
  10. Gödert, W.; Jochum, U.: Mit Information zum Wissen - Durch Wissen zur Information (2002) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Einleitung zu einem Themenheft, das Ergebnis einer Tagung "Mit Information zum Wissen - Durch Wissen zur Information" am 25./26.9.2000 in Wolfenbüttel ist
    Content
    Enthält die Beiträge: JOCHUM, U.: Information oder Wissen und Gedächtnis; ERNST, W.: Datum und Information: Begriffsverwirrungen; JAENECKE, P.: Wissensbausteine; GÖDERT, W.: Der konstruktivistische Ansatz für Kommunikation und Informationsverarbeitung; KÜBLER, H.-D.: Nachrichtenrezeption, Informationsnutzung, Wissenserwerb: Diskrepanzen wissenschaftlicher Zugänge; BONFADELLI, H.: Online-Kommunikation: Die Relevanz der Wissenskluft-Perspektive; GEORGY, U.: Der Wert von Information: Thesen zum Thema.
    Theme
    Information
  11. ¬The value and impact of information (1994) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Based on the first 8 of a series of information policy briefings, organised by the Information Policy Research Section of the British Library Research and Development Department, covering discussions of the value and impact of information
    Series
    British Library research information policy issues
    Theme
    Information
  12. Information : a reader (2022) 0.01
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    Abstract
    For decades, we have been told we live in the "information age"-a time when disruptive technological advancement has reshaped the categories and social uses of knowledge and when quantitative assessment is increasingly privileged. Such methodologies and concepts of information are usually considered the provenance of the natural and social sciences, which present them as politically and philosophically neutral. Yet the humanities should and do play an important role in interpreting and critiquing the historical, cultural, and conceptual nature of information. This book is one of two companion volumes that explore theories and histories of information from a humanistic perspective. They consider information as a long-standing feature of social, cultural, and conceptual management, a matter of social practice, and a fundamental challenge for the humanities today. Information: A Reader provides an introduction to the concept of information in historical, literary, and cultural studies. It features excerpts from more than forty texts by theorists and critics who have helped establish the notion of the "information age" or expand upon it. The reader establishes a canonical framework for thinking about information in humanistic terms. Together with Information: Keywords, it sets forth a major humanistic vision of the concept of information.
    RSWK
    Information / Philosophie / Soziologie / Aufsatzsammlung
    Subject
    Information / Philosophie / Soziologie / Aufsatzsammlung
    Theme
    Information
  13. Great information disasters : twelve prime examples of how information mismanagement led to human misery, political misfortune and business failure (1991) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Enthält: ANDERLA, G.: Is the West losing the information productivity contest?; BOEHM, E.H.: Hitler's decision to attack the Soviet Union, 1941; BURNS, C.: Three Miles Island: the information meltdown; CAWKELL, A.E.: The Tacoma Bridge disaster: a lesson in disregarding information?; DIENER, R.A.V.: Cultural dissolution, a societal information disaster: the case of the Yir Yoront in Australia; KIST, J.: Disaster at Arnhem: the role of information during the operation 'Market Garden' in September 1944; LYTLE, R.: The PPS information system development disaster in the early 1980s; NORTON, B. u. S. GOTTS: The events of October 1987; PRICE, W.H.: The pinnacle of deception: civil war intelligence and signals in 1864; SOPHAR, G.: $ 170.000 down the drain: the MRAIS story; TAYLOR, R.S.: Comments on Gaskill's 'Timetable of a failure'; WEITZEL, J.R. u. D.A. MARCHAND: The US Stock market crash of 1987: the role of information system malfunctions
    Theme
    Information
  14. ¬The philosophy of information (2004) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Luciano Floridi's 1999 monograph, Philosophy and Computing: An Introduction, provided the impetus for the theme of this issue, more for what it did not say about librarianship and information studies (LIS) than otherwise. Following the pioneering works of Wilson, Nitecki, Buckland, and Capurro (plus many of the authors of this issue), researchers in LIS have increasingly turned to the efficacy of philosophical discourse in probing the more fundamental aspects of our theories, including those involving the information concept. A foundational approach to the nature of information, however, has not been realized, either in partial or accomplished steps, nor even as an agreed, theoretical research objective. It is puzzling that while librarianship, in the most expansive sense of all LIS-related professions, past and present, at its best sustains a climate of thought, both comprehensive and nonexclusive, information itself as the subject of study has defied our abilities to generalize and synthesize effectively. Perhaps during periods of reassessment and justification for library services, as well as in times of curricular review and continuing scholarly evaluation of perceived information demand, the necessity for every single stated position to be clarified appears to be exaggerated. Despite this, the important question does keep surfacing as to how information relates to who we are and what we do in LIS.
    Content
    Enthält die Beiträge: Information and Its Philosophy (Ian Cornelius) - Documentation Redux: Prolegomenon to (Another) Philosophy of Information (Bernd Frohmann) - Community as Event (Ronald E. Day) - Information Studies Without Information (Jonathan Furner) - Relevance: Language, Semantics, Philosophy (John M. Budd) - On Verifying the Accuracy of Information: Philosophical Perspectives (Don Fallis) - Arguments for Philosophical Realism in Library and Information Science (Birger Hjørland) - Knowledge Profiling: The Basis for Knowledge Organization (Torkild Thellefsen) - Classification and Categorization: A Difference that Makes a Difference (Elin K. Jacob) - Faceted Classification and Logical Division in Information Retrieval (Jack Mills) - The Epistemological Foundations of Knowledge Representations (Elaine Svenonius) - Classification, Rhetoric, and the Classificatory Horizon (Stephen Paling) - The Ubiquitous Hierarchy: An Army to Overcome the Threat of a Mob (Hope A. Olson) - A Human Information Behavior Approach to a Philosophy of Information (Amanda Spink and Charles Cole) - Cybersemiotics and the Problems of the Information-Processing Paradigm as a Candidate for a Unified Science of Information Behind Library Information Science (Søren Brier)
    Theme
    Information
  15. Information cultures in the digital age : a Festschrift in Honor of Rafael Capurro (2016) 0.01
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    Abstract
    For several decades Rafael Capurro has been at the forefront of defining the relationship between information and modernity through both phenomenological and ethical formulations. In exploring both of these themes Capurro has re-vivified the transcultural and intercultural expressions of how we bring an understanding of information to bear on scientific knowledge production and intermediation. Capurro has long stressed the need to look deeply into how we contextualize the information problems that scientific society creates for us and to re-incorporate a pragmatic dimension into our response that provides a balance to the cognitive turn in information science. With contributions from 35 scholars from 15 countries, Information Cultures in the Digital Age focuses on the culture and philosophy of information, information ethics, the relationship of information to message, the historic and semiotic understanding of information, the relationship of information to power and the future of information education. This Festschrift seeks to celebrate Rafael Capurro's important contribution to a global dialogue on how information conceptualization, use and technology impact human culture and the ethical questions that arise from this dynamic relationship.
    Content
    Inhalt: Super-Science, Fundamental Dimension, Way of Being: Library and Information Science in an Age of Messages / Bawden, David (et al.) (S.31-43) - The "Naturalization" of the Philosophy of Rafael Capurro: Logic, Information and Ethics / Brenner, Joseph E. (S.45-64) - Turing's Cyberworld / Eldred, Michael (S.65-81) - Hermeneutics and Information Science: The Ongoing Journey From Simple Objective Interpretation to Understanding Data as a Form of Disclosure / Kelly, Matthew (S.83-110) - The Epistemological Maturity of Information Science and the Debate Around Paradigms / Ribeiro, Fernanda (et al.) (S.111-124) - A Methodology for Studying Knowledge Creation in Organizational Settings: A Phenomenological Viewpoint / Suorsa, Anna (et al.) (S.125-142) - The Significance of Digital Hermeneutics for the Philosophy of Technology / Tripathi, Arun Kumar (S.143-157) - Reconciling Social Responsibility and Neutrality in LIS Professional Ethics: A Virtue Ethics Approach / Burgess, John T F (S.161-172) - Information Ethics in the Age of Digital Labour and the Surveillance-Industrial Complex / Fuchs, Christian (S.173-190) - Intercultural Information Ethics: A Pragmatic Consideration / Hongladarom, Soraj (S.191-206) - Ethics of European Institutions as Normative Foundation of Responsible Research and Innovation in ICT / Stahl, Bernd Carsten (S.207-219) - Raphael's / Holgate, John D. (S.223-245) - Understanding the Pulse of Existence: An Examination of Capurro's Angeletics / Morador, Fernando Flores (S.247-252) - The Demon in the Gap of Language: Capurro, Ethics and language in Divided Germany / Saldanha, Gustavo Silva (S.253-268) - General Intellect, Communication and Contemporary Media Theory / Frohmann, Bernd (S.271-286) - "Data": The data / Furner, Jonathan (S.287-306) - On the Pre-History of Library Ethics: Documents and Legitimacy / Hansson, Joacim (S.307-319) -
    Ethico-Philosophical Reflection on Overly Self-Confident or Even Arrogant Humanism Applied to a Possible History-oriented Rationality of the Library and Librarianship / Suominen, Vesa (S.321-338) - Culture Clash or Transformation? Some Thoughts Concerning the Onslaught of Market economy on the Internet and its Retaliation / Hausmanninger, Thomas (S.341-358) - Magicians and Guerrillas: Transforming Time and Space / Lodge, Juliet (et al.) (.359-371) - Gramsci, Golem, Google: A Marxist Dialog with Rafael Capurro's Intercultural Information Ethics / Schneider, Marco (S.373-383) - From Culture Industry to Information Society: How Horkheimer and Adorno's Conception of the Culture Industry Can Help Us Examine Information Overload in the Capitalist Information Society / Spier, Shaked (S.385-396) - Ethical and Legal Use of Information by University Students: The Core Content of a Training Program / Fernández-Molina, Juan-Carlos (et al.) (S.399-412) - Reflections on Rafael Capurro's Thoughts in Education and Research of Information Science in Brazil / Pinheiro, Lena Vania (S.413-425) - Content Selection in Undergraduate LIS Education / Zins, Chaim (et al.) (S.427-453) - The Train Has Left the Station: Chronicles of the African Network for Information Ethics and the African Centre of Excellence for Information Ethics / Fischer, Rachel (et al.) (S.455-467).
    LCSH
    Information science
    Language arts & disciplines / Library & Information Science / General
    RSWK
    Kommunikation / Information / Diskursethik
    Subject
    Kommunikation / Information / Diskursethik
    Information science
    Language arts & disciplines / Library & Information Science / General
    Theme
    Information
  16. Information und Imagination : Vorträge von Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker, Golo Mann u.a (1973) 0.01
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    Content
    Enthält die Beiträge: WEIZSÄCKER, C.F. von: Information und Imagination; MANN, G.: Gegenstand und Stil in der Historie; WEINRICH, H.: Wenn ihr die Fabel vertreibt; SIEVERTS, T.: Bild und Berechnung im Städtebau; KOLAKOWSKI, L.: Das Suchen nach der Gewißheit
    Theme
    Information
  17. Welt der Information : Wissen und Wissensvermittlung in Geschichte und Gegenwart (1990) 0.01
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    Theme
    Information
  18. Electronic access to information : a new service paradigm. Proceedings from a symposium, 23-24 July 1993, Palo Alto, CA (1994) 0.01
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    Theme
    Information
  19. Information : keywords (2021) 0.01
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    Abstract
    For decades, we have been told we live in the "information age"-a time when disruptive technological advancement has reshaped the categories and social uses of knowledge and when quantitative assessment is increasingly privileged. Such methodologies and concepts of information are usually considered the provenance of the natural and social sciences, which present them as politically and philosophically neutral. Yet the humanities should and do play an important role in interpreting and critiquing the historical, cultural, and conceptual nature of information. This book is one of two companion volumes that explore theories and histories of information from a humanistic perspective. They consider information as a long-standing feature of social, cultural, and conceptual management, a matter of social practice, and a fundamental challenge for the humanities today. Bringing together essays by prominent critics, Information: Keywords highlights the humanistic nature of information practices and concepts by thinking through key terms. It describes and anticipates directions for how the humanities can contribute to our understanding of information from a range of theoretical, historical, and global perspectives. Together with Information: A Reader, it sets forth a major humanistic vision of the concept of information.
    Bringing together essays by prominent critics, Information: Keywords highlights the humanistic nature of information practices and concepts by thinking through key terms. It describes and anticipates directions for how the humanities can contribute to our understanding of information from a range of theoretical, historical, and global perspectives.
    Content
    Inhalt: Introduction: Information and Humanities, by Michele Kennerly, Samuel Frederick, and Jonathan E. Abel -- Abundance, by Damien Smith Pfister -- Algorithm, by Jeremy David Johnson -- Archive, by Laura Helton -- Bioinformatics, by Haun Saussy -- Cognition, by N. Katherine Hayles -- Gossip, by Elizabeth Horodowich -- Index, by Dennis Duncan -- Intel, by Geoffrey Winthrop-Young -- Keyword, by Daniel Rosenberg -- Knowledge, by Chad Wellmon -- Noise, by Matt Jordan -- Screen, by Francesco Casetti and Bernard Dionysius Geoghegan -- Search, by David L. Marshall -- Self-Tracking, by Deborah Lupton -- Tele (???e), by Wolf Kittler.
    LCSH
    Information science / Miscellanea
    Subject
    Information science / Miscellanea
    Theme
    Information
  20. Philosophy, computing and information science (2014) 0.00
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    Content
    Introduction: Philosophy's Relevance in Computing and Information Science - Ruth Hagengruber and Uwe V.Riss Part I: Philosophy of Computing and Information 1 The Fourth Revolution in our Self-Understanding - Luciano Floridi -- 2 Information Transfer as a Metaphor - Jakob Krebs -- 3 With Aristotle towards a Differentiated Concept of Information? - Uwe Voigt -- 4 The Influence of Philosophy on the Understanding of Computing and Information - Klaus Fuchs-Kittowski -- Part II: Complexity and System Theory 5 The Emergence of Self-Conscious Systems: From Symbolic AI to Embodied Robotics - Klaus Mainzer -- 6 Artificial Intelligence as a New Metaphysical Project - Aziz F. Zambak Part III: Ontology 7 The Relevance of Philosophical Ontology to Information and Computer Science - Barry Smith -- 8 Ontology, its Origins and its Meaning in Information Science - Jens Kohne -- 9 Smart Questions: Steps towards an Ontology of Questions and Answers - Ludwig Jaskolla and Matthias Rugel Part IV: Knowledge Representation 10 Sophisticated Knowledge Representation and Reasoning Requires Philosophy - Selmer Bringsjord, Micah Clark and Joshua Taylor -- 11 On Frames and Theory-Elements of Structuralism Holger Andreas -- 12 Ontological Complexity and Human Culture David J. Saab and Frederico Fonseca Part V: Action Theory 13 Knowledge and Action between Abstraction and Concretion - Uwe V.Riss -- 14 Action-Directing Construction of Reality in Product Creation Using Social Software: Employing Philosophy to Solve Real-World Problems - Kai Holzweifiig and Jens Krüger -- 15 An Action-Theory-Based Treatment ofTemporal Individuals - Tillmann Pross -- 16 Four Rules for Classifying Social Entities - Ludger Jansen Part VI: Info-Computationalism 17 Info-Computationalism and Philosophical Aspects of Research in Information Sciences - Gordana Dodig-Crnkovic -- 18 Pancomputationalism: Theory or Metaphor ? - Vincent C. Mutter Part VII: Ethics 19 The Importance of the Sources of Professional Obligations - Francis C. Dane
    Footnote
    Vgl.: https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/philosophy-computing-and-information-science/EFE440F6D9884BD733C19D1BF535045B.
    LCSH
    Ontologies (Information retrieval)
    Knowledge representation (Information theory)
    RSWK
    Daten / Information / Wissen
    Subject
    Daten / Information / Wissen
    Ontologies (Information retrieval)
    Knowledge representation (Information theory)
    Theme
    Information

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  • e 21

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