Archive for the 'synthesis'
February 6th, 2011 by Charles Cameron
Posted in analogy, analytic, arab world, Charles Cameron, cognition, complexity, computers, connectivity, culture, democracy, dictator, Epistemology, framing, free speech, freedom, innovation, insight, insurgency, islamic world, logic, media, meme, metacognition, Perception, propaganda, psychology, revolution, social science, symmetry, synthesis, Viral, wired | 2 comments
January 28th, 2011 by Charles Cameron
Posted in 21st century, analogy, analytic, arab world, barack obama, Charles Cameron, christianity, CIA, cognition, consilience, creativity, culture, Epistemology, extremists, fiction, framing, fun, Geography, horizontal thinking, humor, ideas, insight, intelligence, islamist, metacognition, myth, obama, Perception, philosophy, psychology, Questions, Religion, science, symmetry, synthesis, terrorism, Theology, thoughts illustrated, visualization | 10 comments
January 21st, 2011 by Charles Cameron
Posted in arab world, art history, byzantium, christianity, culture, framing, history, islamic world, Perception, psychology, Religion, synthesis, Theology, turkey, war | Comments Off on I think of Cordoba
January 12th, 2011 by zen
Grand Strategies: Literature, Statecraft, and...
Read morePosted in academia, authors, book, cultural intelligence, culture, diplomacy, diplomatic history, education, Epistemology, fiction, foreign policy, geopolitics, historiography, history, ideas, intellectuals, leadership, metacognition, myth, national security, philosophy, politics, public diplomacy, social science, society, strategy, Strategy and War, synthesis, teaching, theory | 5 comments
January 4th, 2011 by Charles Cameron
Posted in academia, analogy, analytic, anthropology, art, brain, Charles Cameron, cognition, complexity, connectivity, consilience, cultural intelligence, economics, history, ideas, insight, map, metacognition, music, network theory, philosophy, psychology, rambling, science, social science, synthesis, Theology, theory, Uncategorized, visualization | Comments Off on An Iridology of the Sciences?
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