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  1. Hace 3 días · The article addresses the relevance of the work of Gregory Bateson for psychotherapy today. Despite being quite eclipsed by other mental health paradigms, the author's ecological epistemology still … Expand. 13. PDF. Save.

  2. Hace 5 días · En 1966, Gregory Bateson reflexionaba en un provocador ensayoDe Versalles a la cibernética” sobre las posibilidades de integrarse al mundo digital, el mayor “mordisco al fruto del conocimiento en 2000 años”, al tiempo que Marshall McLuhan lanzaba su también rompedor “el medio es el mensaje”.

  3. In an essay entitled “Conscious Purpose vs. Nature,” published in 1969, Bateson proposed that in the same way as the “physiology” and “neurology” of the human individual function in order to conserve the body and all the body’s physical characteristics—thereby serving as an overall system that con- serves descriptive statements about the human as far as his/her body is con ...

  4. Hace 2 días · On a broader scale than Hebb’s cell assemblies, British anthropologist Gregory Bateson 11 proposed to bridge “how nature works” and “how people think” by discovering “the pattern that connects”across diverse social phenomena, while sociologists and systems theorists see patterns in the structures, scripts, and systems of a society.

  5. Hace 4 días · Suite au célèbre anthropologue Gregory Bateson, qui a beaucoup étudié les jeux animaux (des chiens, des otaries, etc), Dominique Lestel rappelle dans « L’animal singulier » (Seuil) que ...

  6. Hace 3 días · 27 Gregory Batenson, Mind and Nature (New York: E. P. Dutton, 1979).The actual meaning of “a difference that makes a difference” has been disputed. For the details of the discussion see Aaron Sloman, What did Bateson Mean When He Wrote “information” is “a difference that makes a difference”?

  7. Hace 3 días · He is professionally involved in cultural mediation projects, with an event management side, and in education projects as a professional and as a volunteer as well. With a background in humanities and philosophy, he loves to address the ethical and social aspects of Open Source, with an approach that nods to Gregory Bateson and Robert M. Pirsig.