 | Michael Heim - Computers - 1993 - 208 pages
Computers have dramatically altered life in the late twentieth century. Today we can draw on worldwide computer links, speeding up communications by radio, newspapers, and ... | |
 | Paul N. Edwards - History - 1996 - 440 pages
The Closed World offers a radically new alternative to the canonical histories ofcomputers and cognitive science. Arguing that we can make sense of computers as tools only when ... | |
 | Evelyn F. Keller - Science - 1995 - 134 pages
Refiguring Life begins with the history of genetics and embryology, showing how discipline-based metaphors have directed scientists' search for evidence. Keller continues with ... | |
 | Annette Markham - Language Arts & Disciplines - 1998 - 246 pages
Alienating for some, yet most intimate and real for others, emerging communications technologies are creating a varied array of cyberspace experiences. Nowhere are the new and ... | |
 | Andrew Leyshon, Nigel Thrift - Social Science - 1997 - 424 pages
Bringing together in one volume the most important writings of Andrew Leyshon and Nigel Thrift on money and finance, including the unpublished classic "Sexy-Greedy" this ... | |
 | Klaus Mainzer - Artificial intelligence - 2007 - 482 pages
The theory of nonlinear, complex systems has become by now a proven problem-solving approach in the natural sciences. And it is now also recognized that many if not most of our ... | |
 | Amory Starr - Business & Economics - 2000 - 268 pages
A new movement of 'anti-globalists', inTime Magazine's words (24 April 2000), now 'oppose corporate dominion over the planet's poor and disfranchised'.Naming the Enemyis the ... | |
 | Margaret Wertheim - Computers - 2000 - 335 pages
In a masterful analysis of the geography of space, the author of Pythagoras' Trousers explores the changing concepts of both physical space and spiritual space from the Middle ... | |
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