01057nam--2200373---450-99000280505020331620060901110139.088-7187-565-6000280505USA01000280505(ALEPH)000280505USA0100028050520060901d1999----km-y0itay0103----baiaIT||||||||001yyQualità totale a scuolaGiuseppe Negroprefazione di Giancarlo LombardiMilanoIl sole-24 ore libri1999222 p.21 cm<<Le>> guide de Il sole-24 ore2001<<Le>> guide de Il sole-24 ore2001001-------2001ScuolaControllo di qualità371.2NEGRO,Giuseppe116779ITsalbcISBD990002805050203316P08 1733DISTRABKDISTRADISTRA21020060901USA011101Qualità totale a scuola415728UNISA03485nam 22004571a 450 991097113730332120250715130909.097866132227181-283-22271-X0-19-157298-5(MiAaPQ)EBC737413(PPN)230186300(CKB)2560000000326674(EXLCZ)99256000000032667420110810d2010 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierInformation a very short introduction1st ed.Oxford :Oxford University Press,2010.1 online resource (xv, 130 pages) illustrationsVery short introductions0-19-955137-5 0-19-177734-X Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover Page -- Copyright Page -- Very Short Introductions -- Title Page -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- List of Illustrations -- List of tables -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 The information revolution -- Chapter 2 The language of information -- Chapter 3 Mathematical information -- Chapter 4 Semantic information -- Chapter 5 Physical information -- Chapter 6 Biological information -- Chapter 7 Economic information -- Chapter 8 The ethics of information -- Epilogue: the marriage of physis and techne -- References -- Index -- Expand your collection of VERY SHORT INTRODUCTIONS -- INTELLIGENCE A Very Short Introduction -- ANARCHISM A Very Short Introduction.We live an information-soaked existence - information pours into our lives through television, radio, books, and of course, the Internet. Some say we suffer from 'infoglut'. But what is information? The concept of 'information' is a profound one, rooted in mathematics, central to whole branches of science, yet with implications on every aspect of our everyday lives: DNA provides the information to create us; we learn through the information fed to us; we relate to each other throughinformation transfer - gossip, lectures, reading. Information is not only a mathematically powerful concept, but its critical role in society raises wider ethical issues: who owns information? Who controls its dissemination? Who has access to information?Luciano Floridi, a philosopher of information, cuts across many subjects, from a brief look at the mathematical roots of information - its definition and measurement in 'bits'- to its role in genetics (we are information), and its social meaning and value. He ends by considering the ethics of information, including issues of ownership, privacy, and accessibility; copyright and open source. For those unfamiliar with its precise meaning and wide applicability as a philosophical concept, 'information' may seem a bland or mundane topic. Those who have studied some science or philosophy or sociology will already be aware of its centrality and richness. But for all readers, whether from the humanities or sciences, Floridi gives a fascinating and inspirational introduction to this most fundamental of ideas.Very short introductions.Knowledge, Sociology ofKnowledge, Sociology ofELECTRONIC BOOKFloridi Luciano486394MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQ9910971137303321Information1508159UNINA01078nam0 22002891i 450 UON0045142920231205105043.13420150309f |0itac50 baitaIT|||| 1||||Calvinodi Giuseppe GangaleRomaDoxa[1927]72 p.20 cm.valore stimatoIT-UONSI BIBBIANT/0334001UON002774892001 Collezione di storia, religione, filosofia210 RomaDoxa.1Calvino, GiovanniUONC049049FIITRomaUONL000004280.4CHIESE PROTESTANTI E PROTESTANTESIMO21GANGALEGiuseppeUONV225848DoxaUONV268976650ITSOL20250801RICASIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOUONSIUON00451429SIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOSI BIBBIA NT 0334 SI 13189 7 0334 valore stimatoCalvino480441UNIOR