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| Home > Science & Nature, Ages 6-8 We Have Found 8 Products for your search of Science & Nature, Ages 6-8. Displaying Items Page 1 and Articles Page 1.
    (0 vote) Purchase the Right Toy That Compliments Your Child’s Age Dmytro Fedosev No matter whether you're a first time parent or an outdated guard, the process of choosing the appropriate toy for your little one is important. That is considered to be one of the ideal methods of holding youngsters entertained and you cannot afford to make the flawed choice. At any given time, you'll come throughout several shops and whereas this is speculated to make the purchasi... products, articles
    (0 vote) Wooden Blocks - An Adaptable Toy for Children of All Ages Ian Harris Wooden building blocks are a classic toy that encourage physical, social and mental development in a child. Wooden toy blocks and bricks are a toy that can be used by all age groups from babies through to pre-school children. Children's Building blocks can be utilized in a variety of ways. In fact, there is no right or wrong way, what is done with them or how it is done is entirely up t... products, articles
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http://www.egs.edu/ Manuel De Landa lecturing about the duality of meaning in signification and significance in the Gilles Deleuze and Science seminar. He spoke about how these definitions shape perceptions and attitudes, drawing on Hume and Kant to explain the views of Gilles Deleuze. Referencing CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News to discuss the advent of advertising in the birth of media, and the resulting formations of power, De Landa explored ethical decisions both within, and without the Academy. Public open lecture for the students and faculty of the European Graduate School EGS Media and Communication Studies department program Saas-Fee Switzerland. Manuel De Landa 2009
Manuel De Landa is, a philosopher, media theorist, film maker, and artist. As these, he has inhabited and lived between the intersections of thinking and creativity, uncovering the interstices which link historically separate autonomous fields to each other. Beginning in the late 1970s in New York where he produced a number of underground 8 and 16 mm films, De Landa has been at the forefront of creative thinking, working at the outer edges of media theory and incorporating the work of Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari into his ideas. Manuel De Landa holds the Gilles Deleuze Chair of Contemporary Philosophy at the European Graduate School as well as teaching at Columbia University, the University of Philadelphia and the School of Visual Arts in New York City.
De Landas close reading of Deleuze and Guattari, and more importantly his continuation or extension of their ideas, sees the creative potential of philosophy in a new materialism. In his writing he seeks to expand on the notion of a total unity, through assemblage, of multiple singularities. His work focuses on the idea that our rational view of the world in stable, solid structures is at best limited; instead he seeks clarification through the concept of liquidity, in which the liquid structures, constantly on the verge of chaos, have the greatest potential for creation. De Landa rejects viewing the world through a solely anthropocentric perspective and instead gains insight through an insistence on viewing nature from a non-anthropocentrically heirarchized environment. In this liquidity, De Landa see the power to self-organize and further, the ability to form an ethics of sorts, one untouched by human static control, and which allows an existence at the edge of creative, flowing chaos.
This unique vision comes to the fore in De Landas A Thousand Years of Nonlinear History, in which he analyses history as a confluence of infinite variation, a flow of dynamic processes without rational, or traditional, order. De Landa sees in his history instead a revived form of materialism, liberated from the dogmas of the past. The history then presented is one of flowing articulations rather than one conducted along a linear, static construction. Moving beyond a concept of binary oppositions, De Landa instead sees a past of infinite bifurcations, a flowing, liquid unfolding which exposes a collective identity from a myriad of points and perspectives.
Manuel De Landa has written and published extensively since the early 1990s. His published work includes War In the Age of Intelligent Machines (1991), A Thousand Years of Nonlinear History (2000), Intensive Science and Virtual Philosophy (2005), and most recently A New Philosophy of Society: Assemblage Theory and Social Complexity (2006).
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