Results 131 to 140 of about 393 (164)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Stanislaw Lem and a Topology of Mind

Science Fiction Studies, 1992
In his speculative fiction, Stanislaw Lem explores the boundaries between mind and brain by fabricating alternative paths to consciousness. Lem models other, inorganic, systems of consciousness; we can learn from the coherence of these models by analyzing their structure using current epistemological theories.
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Stanislaw Lem: Selected Letters to Michael Kandel

2014
Stanislaw Lem, Peter Swirski
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Rationality and knowledge in complex systems: The case of Stanislaw Lem

open access: yesJournal of Literary Studies, 1996
Summary The article focuses on two “detective novels” by Stanislaw Lem, analysed in terms of chaos theory, which states that complex systems are not merely disorderly, but can generate a kind of order. Lem's fictions exemplify the failure of rationality to solve problems within the context of infinite networks of random variables.
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Stanislaw Lem’s “Star Diaries”

Science Fiction Studies, 1986
Lem’s “Star Diaries” have a special place among his story-cycles, since they span most of his career and reflect his changing concerns. Still, they have a common theme: the presumptuousness of the intellect. The cycle begins in the farcical mode of the Miinchhausen tales, parodying the typical attitudes of Earthlings claiming the status of general ...
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Two Meditations on Stanislaw Lem

Science Fiction Studies, 1986
Lem’s fiction depicts the “human element” in two ways. Viewed optimistically (as in The Cyberiad, Solaris, and “The Mask”). human personality is a system sufficiently complex to be unpredictable and autonomous. Viewed pessimistically, the same system of consciousness is fundamentally flawed, since it is doomed to annihilation and enslaved by its ...
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Gendering the Robot: Stanislaw Lem’s “The Mask”

Science Fiction Studies, 1992
In fictional texts, the issue of artificial intelligence has brought to the fore the question of human consciousness. Androids, cyborgs, and robots prompt us to ask whether machines could manifest consciousness and whether we could in fact be replaced by our creations.
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