Archive for the 'cognition'
June 22nd, 2011 by zen
The real value was in the comment thread....
Read morePosted in Clausewitzian, cognition, counterintuitive, democracy, Epistemology, geopolitics, ideas, intellectuals, metacognition, national security, politics, psychology, scenario, social science, society, strategist, strategy, Strategy and War, synthesis, Tactics, theory, Uncategorized, war | 5 comments
June 18th, 2011 by Charles Cameron
Posted in analogy, analytic, art, art history, Charles Cameron, cognition, complexity, connectivity, creativity, cultural intelligence, games, geopolitics, Hipbone Analysis, Hipbone Games, horizontal thinking, ideas, insight, metacognition, music, myth, Patterns, Perception, Said Symphony, symmetry, synthesis, Uncategorized | 6 comments
June 18th, 2011 by Charles Cameron
Posted in analogy, analytic, art, art history, Charles Cameron, cognition, complexity, connectivity, creativity, cultural intelligence, games, geopolitics, Hipbone Analysis, Hipbone Games, horizontal thinking, ideas, insight, metacognition, music, myth, Patterns, Perception, Said Symphony, symmetry, synthesis, Uncategorized | Comments Off on The Said Symphony: moves 1-5
June 12th, 2011 by zen
As noted previously, I was fortunate to attend...
Read morePosted in 19th century, 2011, 20th century, 21st century, 3 gen gangs, 4GW, academia, Afghanistan, Air Force, al qaida, America, army, barnett, Clausewitzian, cognition, COIN, counterinsurgency, Cyberwar, defense, DIME, diplomacy, diplomatic history, education, Epistemology, foreign policy, government, historians, history, ideas, insurgency, intellectuals, intelligence, leadership, metacognition, military, military contractor, military history, military intelligence, military reform, national security, Network-centric Warfare, organizations, security, social science, strategist, strategy, Strategy and War, Tactics, theory, war, warriors | 12 comments
June 6th, 2011 by J.ScottShipman
Posted in cognition, Epistemology, framing, ideas, intelligence, J. Scott Shipman, john boyd, linguistics, psychology, reading | 16 comments
Older Newer