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8+ Obras 986 Miembros 10 Reseñas 2 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Bart Kosko is a professor of electrical engineering at USC.

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Obras de Bart Kosko

Obras relacionadas

Fuzzy Cognitive Maps: Advances in Theory, Methodologies, Tools and Applications (2010) — Prólogo, algunas ediciones2 copias

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Some decent ideas in this book, but they get overshadowed by the author's Promethean comparison of how his colleagues and he brought the fire of fuzzy logic to the temples of Aristotelean logic. there it was not welcome, but in Asian countries who follow The Buddha it was welcomed. Now America faces a great challenge that only the long-suffering author can set to rights.

Slow on dealing the knowledge, and long in the persecution. This is more memoir than edifying.
 
Denunciada
craigmaloney | 5 reseñas más. | Mar 21, 2020 |
Probably more or less ok. This book took me 20 years to get around to reading. It wasn't worth the wait but I'm still glad I read it.
 
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graffiti.living | 5 reseñas más. | Oct 22, 2017 |
Interesting book, but as noted in one other review here review, not particularly well written. I found myself skimming the later chapters just to read the quotes Kosko included. Short summaries (dumping the math) could be "It depends" or "there is no black and white" or to use his own statement "everything is a matter of degree". I had this on my shelf and picked it up while reading Michael Shermer's "How We Believe" to follow up on a reference Shermer made. While not a fuzzy activist, I recognized while reading that long ago I adopted mostly fuzzy thinking, meaning all things are relative.… (más)
 
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Razinha | 5 reseñas más. | May 23, 2017 |

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