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Anticipation learning from the past: the Russian/Soviet contributions to the science of anticipation

This volume presents the work of leading scientists from Russia, Georgia, Estonia, Lithuania, Israel, and the USA, revealing major insights long unknown to the scientific community. Without any doubt their work will provide a springboard for further research in anticipation. Until recently, Robert R...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Nadin, Mihai
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Springer 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-19446-2
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2040761
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author Nadin, Mihai
author_facet Nadin, Mihai
author_sort Nadin, Mihai
collection CERN
description This volume presents the work of leading scientists from Russia, Georgia, Estonia, Lithuania, Israel, and the USA, revealing major insights long unknown to the scientific community. Without any doubt their work will provide a springboard for further research in anticipation. Until recently, Robert Rosen (Anticipatory Systems) and Mihai Nadin (MIND – Anticipation and Chaos) were deemed forerunners in this still new knowledge domain. The distinguished neurobiologist, Steven Rose, pointed to the fact that Soviet neuropsychological theories have not on the whole been well received by Western science. These earlier insights as presented in this volume make an important contribution to the foundation of the science of anticipation. It is shown that the daring hypotheses and rich experimental evidence produced by Bernstein, Beritashvili, Ukhtomsky, Anokhin, and Uznadze, among others—extend foundational work to aspects of neuroscience, physiology, motorics, education.
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spelling cern-20407612021-04-21T20:08:33Zdoi:10.1007/978-3-319-19446-2http://cds.cern.ch/record/2040761engNadin, MihaiAnticipation learning from the past: the Russian/Soviet contributions to the science of anticipationEngineeringThis volume presents the work of leading scientists from Russia, Georgia, Estonia, Lithuania, Israel, and the USA, revealing major insights long unknown to the scientific community. Without any doubt their work will provide a springboard for further research in anticipation. Until recently, Robert Rosen (Anticipatory Systems) and Mihai Nadin (MIND – Anticipation and Chaos) were deemed forerunners in this still new knowledge domain. The distinguished neurobiologist, Steven Rose, pointed to the fact that Soviet neuropsychological theories have not on the whole been well received by Western science. These earlier insights as presented in this volume make an important contribution to the foundation of the science of anticipation. It is shown that the daring hypotheses and rich experimental evidence produced by Bernstein, Beritashvili, Ukhtomsky, Anokhin, and Uznadze, among others—extend foundational work to aspects of neuroscience, physiology, motorics, education.Springeroai:cds.cern.ch:20407612015
spellingShingle Engineering
Nadin, Mihai
Anticipation learning from the past: the Russian/Soviet contributions to the science of anticipation
title Anticipation learning from the past: the Russian/Soviet contributions to the science of anticipation
title_full Anticipation learning from the past: the Russian/Soviet contributions to the science of anticipation
title_fullStr Anticipation learning from the past: the Russian/Soviet contributions to the science of anticipation
title_full_unstemmed Anticipation learning from the past: the Russian/Soviet contributions to the science of anticipation
title_short Anticipation learning from the past: the Russian/Soviet contributions to the science of anticipation
title_sort anticipation learning from the past: the russian/soviet contributions to the science of anticipation
topic Engineering
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-19446-2
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2040761
work_keys_str_mv AT nadinmihai anticipationlearningfromthepasttherussiansovietcontributionstothescienceofanticipation