The science of cybernetics has discovered many similarities between computers and the human brain. |
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Those moral and ethical issues have been under-discussed, at least as far as cybernetics is concerned. |
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His notion of the mind as a self-regulating system is in line with modern ideas on cybernetics. |
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He is best known for his work in cybernetics, the study of control systems, especially systems that blend human nerves with electronic networks. |
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Since the first wave of cybernetics, control remains the most difficult of strategies to manage populations and their environment. |
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We are just now beginning to recognize the new order resulting from the development of the science of cybernetics. |
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He participated in the Macy Foundation meetings that founded the science of cybernetics, but kept a healthy distance from computers. |
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This field, situated somewhere between physics, engineering, and cybernetics, may or may not fulfill the hopes of its contemporary proponents. |
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There is a specialized science, cybernetics, studying these problems of the general systems theory. |
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In addition to anything else, to ignore the crucial functioning of the meat in the machine is poor cybernetics. |
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She is especially interested in cybernetics and systems analysis as sources of chronophobia in artists and others. |
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The competition has been organised to promote cybernetics, the study of the interaction between computers and humans. |
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To ascertain the need of employing a person with expertise in the fields of multimedia and cybernetics. |
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Einstein's theory of relativity was ostracized by many scientists in the cause of self-preservation, while quantum mechanics and cybernetics were virtually banned. |
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In this fiefdom he was able to pursue his own projects, and soon the whirring of robots could be heard across the lino floors of the cybernetics department. |
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Meditech, one of the few companies not dealing with cybernetics exclusively, uses the side effects of that industry to make a killing. |
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This enhanced ability of computers has made possible two different views of cybernetics. |
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A derivation of the mathematical equations of prediction had been accomplished in a limited sense some years before Wiener's work on cybernetics. |
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Wiener was a central figure at the Macy Conferences and was one of the founders of the interdisciplinary science of cybernetics. |
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An important part in science comes to be taken by such fields of it as the study of systems, mathematics, cybernetics and the study of operations. |
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Ampere, before him, wanted cybernetics to be the science of government. |
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I was just beginning to become interested in cybernetics and robotics. |
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Malik's consultants transfer findings from cybernetics and biology to the communication structures within a team so that the knowledge of key employees is networked as efficiently as possible. |
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The era started by integrating several concepts: the digitization of network of networks, interactivity, cybernetics and a strong technology push. |
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In a society so enthralled by cybernetics, it takes the boldness of a boy willing to point out that the emperor has no clothes to question how much of this so-called information is worth having. |
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The term provided a sexy-sounding but informative semantic umbrella for a research programme that encompassed such previously disparate fields as operations research, cybernetics, logic and computer science. |
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Another form of decentralised planning is the use of cybernetics, or the use of computers to manage the allocation of economic inputs. |
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This discipline is based on the basic principles of molecular biology, but combined with elements such as electronics, computer science, cybernetics and life sciences. |
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In October 1956 the Academy of Sciences held a session that legitimated cybernetics, which had been denounced by Stalinist science and propaganda as a pseudodiscipline. |
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Gwernaffield-based Cybernetics says the rise of Quick Response codes represents a huge opportunity for businesses. |
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When the system under consideration involves a ring of signals intelligence package, the role of Cybernetics Becomes more prominent. |
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Cybernetics expert Kevin Warwick believes tiny microchips implanted into people's brains could boost basic human powers and help combat illnesses. |
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