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  1. The Human Use of Human Beings. Cybernetics and Society.Norbert Wiener - 1952 - Philosophy 27 (102):249-251.
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  • Canonic Texts in Media Research: Are There Any Should There Be How About These.Elihu Katz - 2003 - Blackwell.
    Media studies is more than 50 years old, and the authors in this text offer their own candidate texts for canonization. Each essay presents a critical reading of one of these classics and debates its candidacy. The texts are summarized, analysed and re-examined for their contemporary relevance.
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  • Syntactic Structures.Noam Chomsky - 1957 - Mouton.
    Noam Chomsky's book on syntactic structures is a serious attempts on the part of a linguist to construct within the tradition of scientific theory-construction ...
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  • From Information Theory to French Theory: Jakobson, Lévi-Strauss, and the Cybernetic Apparatus.Bernard Dionysius Geoghegan - 2011 - Critical Inquiry 38 (1):96-126.
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  • Elements of semiology.Roland Barthes - unknown
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  • Anthropology Today: An Encyclopedic Inventory.Alfred Louis Kroeber (ed.) - 1953 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    Reference book; p.279-80; notes on Australian languages, other odd references to Aborigines throughout book.
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  • Fast Cars, Clean Bodies: Decolonization and the Reordering of French Culture.Dana Polan & Kristin Ross - 1996 - Substance 25 (1):135.
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  • Fast Cars, Clean Bodies: Decolonization and the Reordering of French Culture.Jean-Philippe Mathy & Kristin Ross - 1996 - Substance 25 (1):131.
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  • The Cybernetic Matrix of `French Theory'.Céline Lafontaine - 2007 - Theory, Culture and Society 24 (5):27-46.
    This article aims to draw a portrait of the influence of cybernetics on soft science. To this end, structuralism, post-structuralism and postmodern philosophy will be successively analyzed in a perspective based on importing concepts stemming from the cybernetic paradigm (information, feedback, entropy, complexity, etc.). By focusing more specifically on the American postwar context, we intend to remind the audience that many soft science specialists were involved in the elaboration of this ‘new science’. We will then retrace the influence of the (...)
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  • Cyborg history and the World War II regime.Andrew Pickering - 1995 - Perspectives on Science 3 (1):1-48.
    The Second World War was a watershed in history in many ways. I focus on the World War II discontinuity as it relates to the intersection of scientific and military enterprise. I am interested in how we should conceptualize that intersection and in offering a preliminary tracing of the “World War II regime” that has grown out of it—a regime that includes new forms of scientific and military practice but that has invaded and transformed many other cultural spaces, including—my primary (...)
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  • Trust in numbers: the pursuit of objectivity in science and public life.Theodore M. Porter - 1995 - Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.
    What accounts for the prestige of quantitative methods? The usual answer is that quantification is desirable in social investigation as a result of its successes in science. Trust in Numbers questions whether such success in the study of stars, molecules, or cells should be an attractive model for research on human societies, and examines why the natural sciences are highly quantitative in the first place. Theodore Porter argues that a better understanding of the attractions of quantification in business, government, and (...)
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  • The Ontology of the Enemy: Norbert Wiener and the Cybernetic Vision.Peter Galison - 1994 - Critical Inquiry 21 (1):228-266.
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  • The École Libre at The New School, 1941-1946.Aristide Zolberg & Agnès Callamard - 1998 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 65.
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  • Cybernétique et « théorie française »: faux alliés, vrais ennemis.François Cusset - 2005 - Multitudes 22 (3):223-231.
    Responding to recent publications by Céline Lafontaine, François Cusset unties the illusions of the supposed knot between the US ideology of cybernetics and the “French Theory” represented by thinkers like Foucault, Derrida, Lyotard or Deleuze. Those who denounce a historical complicity between these two “anti-Humanist” movements in the name of a few superficial analogies miss the profoundly critical nature of French Theory towards capitalism. It is rather on the side of those technophobic Humanists so eager to denounce the Pensée 68 (...)
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  • Fundamentals of Language (an Excerpt).Roman Jakobson & Morris Halle - 1967 - In Donald Clayton Hildum (ed.), Language And Thought: An Enduring Problem In Psychology. London: : Van Nostrand,. pp. 51.
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