Senin, 25 April 2011

[T513.Ebook] Free PDF Information: A Very Short Introduction, by Luciano Floridi

Free PDF Information: A Very Short Introduction, by Luciano Floridi

Reading habit will always lead people not to satisfied reading Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi, a publication, ten book, hundreds books, and more. One that will certainly make them really feel pleased is completing reviewing this publication Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi and obtaining the notification of the publications, then finding the various other following book to check out. It proceeds more as well as much more. The time to complete checking out an e-book Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi will certainly be consistently various depending on spar time to spend; one instance is this Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi

Information: A Very Short Introduction, by Luciano Floridi

Information: A Very Short Introduction, by Luciano Floridi



Information: A Very Short Introduction, by Luciano Floridi

Free PDF Information: A Very Short Introduction, by Luciano Floridi

Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi. In what instance do you like checking out a lot? Just what about the type of the e-book Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi The requirements to check out? Well, everybody has their very own factor why needs to read some e-books Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi Mostly, it will certainly connect to their need to get expertise from guide Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi as well as intend to check out simply to obtain home entertainment. Novels, tale book, and other amusing e-books become so popular this day. Besides, the scientific publications will certainly likewise be the most effective need to choose, especially for the pupils, teachers, physicians, business owner, and other occupations which enjoy reading.

As known, many individuals claim that books are the home windows for the globe. It does not indicate that acquiring book Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi will certainly imply that you can buy this globe. Just for joke! Checking out a publication Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi will certainly opened someone to think better, to maintain smile, to captivate themselves, and also to motivate the knowledge. Every book additionally has their characteristic to affect the reader. Have you recognized why you read this Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi for?

Well, still confused of just how to get this e-book Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi below without going outside? Merely link your computer system or device to the website as well as begin downloading and install Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi Where? This web page will certainly reveal you the web link web page to download Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi You never ever worry, your preferred publication will certainly be faster all yours now. It will be much easier to take pleasure in reading Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi by on-line or obtaining the soft documents on your gadget. It will certainly despite which you are and also what you are. This book Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi is composed for public and also you are among them that can delight in reading of this book Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi

Investing the extra time by reading Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi could offer such excellent encounter also you are simply seating on your chair in the workplace or in your bed. It will not curse your time. This Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi will assist you to have even more precious time while taking remainder. It is quite pleasurable when at the noon, with a mug of coffee or tea as well as a publication Information: A Very Short Introduction, By Luciano Floridi in your gadget or computer screen. By appreciating the views around, here you can begin reading.

Information: A Very Short Introduction, by Luciano Floridi

We live in a society that is awash with information, but few of us really understand what information is. In this Very Short Introduction, one of the world's leading authorities on the philosophy of information and on information ethics, Luciano Floridi, offers an illuminating exploration of information as it relates to both philosophy and science. He discusses the roots of the concept of information in mathematics and science, and considers the role of information in several fields, including biology. Floridi also discusses concepts such as "Infoglut" (too much information to process) and the emergence of an information society, and he addresses the nature of information as a communication process and its place as a physical phenomenon. Perhaps more important, he explores information's meaning and value, and ends by considering the broader social and ethical issues relating to information, including problems surrounding accessibility, privacy, ownership, copyright, and open source. This book helps us understand the true meaning of the concept and how it can be used to understand our world.

About the Series: Combining authority with wit, accessibility, and style, Very Short Introductions offer an introduction to some of life's most interesting topics. Written by experts for the newcomer, they demonstrate the finest contemporary thinking about the central problems and issues in hundreds of key topics, from philosophy to Freud, quantum theory to Islam.

  • Sales Rank: #37799 in Books
  • Published on: 2010-03-26
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 4.40" h x .60" w x 6.80" l, .28 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 160 pages

Review
Splendidly pellucid. Steven Poole, The Guardian

About the Author

Luciano Floridi is Professor of Philosophy and Ethics of Information at the University of Oxford, Senior Research Fellow at the Oxford Internet Institute, and Fellow of St Cross College, Oxford. Among his recognitions, he has been appointed the Gauss Professor by the Academy of Sciences in G�ttingen, and is recipient of the APA's Barwise Prize, the IACAP's Covey Award, and the INSEIT's Weizenbaum Award. He is an AISB and BCS Fellow, Editor in Chief of Philosophy & Technology and of the Synthese Library, and was Chairman of EU Commission's 'Onlife' research group. His most recent books are: The Philosophy of Information (OUP, 2011), Information: A Very Short Introduction (OUP, 2010), and The Cambridge Handbook of Information and Computer Ethics (CUP, 2010).

Most helpful customer reviews

48 of 51 people found the following review helpful.
Groundbreaking and visionary, but very short indeed
By Irfan A. Alvi
Leaving aside the possibility of minds, souls, and the like, people used to think that the ultimate "stuff" of the universe is matter. Then thermodynamics matured during the 19th century, culminating with Einstein's theoretical demonstration that matter can be converted to energy, thus rendering energy apparently even more fundamental than matter. Now, as a result of multiple streams of developments during the 20th century, we live in an age when information is increasingly being viewed as the true ultimate stuff. This is at once both immensely stimulating and perplexing: stimulating because the concept of information has far greater interdisciplinary unifying power than any concept which came before, but perplexing because the concept of information is very abstract and thus elusively slippery.

In this book, Luciano Floridi clearly makes an earnest effort to navigate the difficult terrain presented by the manifold concept of information, and I think he does commendably well. The flow of the book makes sense. He sets the stage by describing how information-saturated our lives have become, to the point where we can be described as "inforgs" living in an "infosphere." He then looks at the concept of information by progressing through increasingly wider contexts: information as data, the mathematical theory of communication of data, semantic aspects of information, physical information (laws of thermodynamics, Maxwell's demon, etc.), biological information (a nicely nuanced discussion), economic information (emphasizing game theory and also touching on Bayes' theorem), a rather creative effort (even if not quite convincing) to reformulate ethical theory from an informational perspective, and finally an epilogue arguing for both the necessity and possibility of merging the natural and manmade worlds.

This broad scope properly reflects most of the key contempary perspectives on information. The follow-up question is whether this breadth comes at the expense of depth, and I think the answer is both yes and no. On one hand, Floridi writes at a fairly high level and thus manages to pack in a good bit of detail; this demands significant concentration by the reader and will make the book hard to follow for readers without at least a little background in the topics discussed. But on the other hand, I did find that the majority of the topics cried out for a much deeper treatment, to the extent that it was sometimes difficult to clearly grasp Floridi's key points because his discussion was simply too brief. In that sense, the book whets the appetite rather than serving up a full meal, so I'm tempted to deduct a star. But it can be argued that the book has fulfilled its mandate of providing a "very short introduction," so let's be generous and stick with 5 stars.

Since this book does a good job of introducing a fundamentally important topic in a groundbreaking and visionary way, and since I don't know of any better book for that purpose, I highly recommend it.

13 of 13 people found the following review helpful.
Comparing Floridi to Seife and Luenberger
By Let's Compare Options Preptorial
This great little book is a quickly readable survey of information science, with an emphasis on philosophy and ethics rather than problem solving or business. Two other extremes (not counting the dozen wonderful Dover titles on information theory for under $5 which are certainly worthwhile) include:

1. Luenberger: Information Science

David's book is about $90 US and our databases show it to be the most used IS textbook, even though it is a 2006 edition. In about 450 pages, it covers the practical applications as well as theory of the entire field of information science, from Shannon to smart phones and economics, minus the "wow how cool is IS" as well as the "we're drowning in info and can't get up" spins.

2. Seife: Decoding the Universe: How the New Science of Information Is Explaining Everything in the Cosmos, from Our Brains to Black Holes

Also from 2006, available used for a penny on some Amazon third party offers, 296 pages.

Very Short Intro (VSI- Floridi) fits nicely between the two. Seife is a wonderful page-turner and a must have if you're into information and math. His "zero" book (Zero: The Biography of a Dangerous Idea was a best seller, and also is about 50c used-- an awesome survey of math. Seife covers both practical problem solving and "meta" issues, but is much less thick and ponderous than Floridi, which has to be studied a little more carefully to get the nuances (not a bad thing). But Floridi isn't all "heavy" -- he talks about a researcher in the "near future" (a million years from now) evaluating our current information leaps!

All three texts cover Shannon, but Floridi and Luenberger do so more with generality and reverence, whereas Seife goes into DEEP detail about redundancy, logarithms, the relationship of amplitudes/ signals to codecs (as in Shannon's connecting log forms to entropy), etc. including a great appendix ON logs. If you enjoy math as well as story telling, Seife delivers.

Floridi is of course much more "up to date" in stats (zettabytes!) etc. since he's more current, but you don't really gain or lose anything there, since much of Floridi is about challenging and re-defining at the conceptual, ideational and definitional levels. If you want detailed, applied, usable problem solving, get Luenberger, if you want a "can't put it down" fun read that touches on the fact that we're "really" living in the Matrix, 13th floor, Tron, etc.-- Seife is the ticket. Both Seife and Floridi give that "wow" feeling that we are really information living in information for the sake of, well, information! They both adequately portray the revolutionary wonder of moving from matter to energy to information in our world view, getting more and more universal (or at the risk of induction, which they both trash-- general), at each leap.

The difference is, Floridi is dry and methodical, Seife is fun and amazing, but you need a little more "math love" with Seife on the other hand. Luenberger is, well, a text. Yes, the best text BUT I include him here mostly for the readers that are looking for less wonder and philosophy and more practical "What does all this mean for careers, business, applications, search engines... etc. All three rate 5 stars, for what they intend to be.

Library Picks reviews only for the benefit of Amazon shoppers and has nothing to do with Amazon, the authors, manufacturers or publishers of the items we review. We always buy the items we review for the sake of objectivity, and although we search for gems, are not shy about trashing an item if it's a waste of time or money for Amazon shoppers. If the reviewer identifies herself, her job or her field, it is only as a point of reference to help you gauge the background and any biases.

50 of 63 people found the following review helpful.
Just out of reach
By Historied
I came to this book full of hope for a concise introduction to the field of information. What I found resembled one of those dreams when you are following someone around endless corridors without any clear idea of where they are going, and you can't quite catch up to the figure to ask them: 'where are we headed and for what purpose?' Perhaps the author's St. Cross College, Oxford founded in 1965 consists of Borgesian labyrinths? From time to time during the reading, I stopped to check the structure and content of the sentences and yes they were properly constructed sentences, and they did appear to have information content by the author's criteria. But as I resumed reading, there was a nagging voice saying 'so what?' I liked his map of the subject matter that he kept pointing out: 'you are here', but then I realized that this did not really help. Reading this book made me have no new thoughts, and being generative is one of my key criteria for awarding stars. Increasingly, I began to wonder if this is the future of what the author calls the infosphere. We will have almost infinite connectivity with unlimited numbers of deeply interesting people (and I sure from his bio that Luciano Floridi is intelligent and interesting), and we will exchange messages of considerably complexity, but with little emotive richness. Messages about messages, self referential solipsist stimulation and I am not sure that is how we want to live? And perhaps unfairly I ultimately felt like I had spent some hours in the company of a Train Spotter (called Foamer in the US) explaining the finer points of the locomotive numbering system. Phew! I did finish it. And I will go back to check I am not doing it an injustice. If someone can help me better understand the author's macro take on information, please write a review. It may just be me.

See all 23 customer reviews...

Information: A Very Short Introduction, by Luciano Floridi PDF
Information: A Very Short Introduction, by Luciano Floridi EPub
Information: A Very Short Introduction, by Luciano Floridi Doc
Information: A Very Short Introduction, by Luciano Floridi iBooks
Information: A Very Short Introduction, by Luciano Floridi rtf
Information: A Very Short Introduction, by Luciano Floridi Mobipocket
Information: A Very Short Introduction, by Luciano Floridi Kindle

Information: A Very Short Introduction, by Luciano Floridi PDF

Information: A Very Short Introduction, by Luciano Floridi PDF

Information: A Very Short Introduction, by Luciano Floridi PDF
Information: A Very Short Introduction, by Luciano Floridi PDF

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar