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The Theory of Categorical Conversion : Rational Foundations of Nkrumaism in Socio-natural Systemicity and Complexity.

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Dompere, Kofi
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: London : Adonis & Abbey Publishers Ltd, 2017.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Machine generated contents note: ch. One Abstract Ideas and Practice of Ideas in Social Settings: Extentions and Reflections on Nkrumah
  • 1.1. Abstract Ideas, Possibility Space and the Possible-world Space
  • 1.2. Philosophy and Ideology in Social Information and Knowledge
  • 1.3. Illusory Ideology and the Possible-World Space
  • ch. Two Restructuring the Mind of Africa and the Oppressed: Defining an Initial Framework for Liberation Thinking in Socio-Natural Systemo-Complexity
  • 2.1. Art and Science of Creating an Unthinking People for Imperialist and Colonialist Domination and Exploitation
  • 2.2. Task of Nkrumah, the Road to the African Decolonization, Independence and Emancipation
  • 2.3. Uses of the Imperialist Philosophy and Ideology
  • 2.4. Contending Ideologies, Freedom and Liberation
  • ch. Three Intellectual Task for Africa's Decolonization and Emancipation in Complexity of Social Systemicity
  • 3.1. Reflections by Some Pan-African Personalities on the Task
  • 3.2. Ontology, Epistemology and the Prelude to the Logic in Nkrumaist Conceptual System
  • 3.3. Ontological-Epistemological Relationship in the Development Of either Imperial or Liberation Philosophy and Ideology
  • ch. Four Theory of Categorial Conversion: Philosophical Foundations and Extensions of Nkrumaism in Socio-Natural Systemicity
  • 4.1. Searching for an Alternative Paradigm
  • 4.1.1. Reconciling the Elements in the Ontological and Epistemological Spaces
  • 4.1.2. Framework for the Development of Non-classical Laws of Thought
  • 4.1.3. Conceptual Definitions of Some Important Concepts
  • 4.1.4. Comparison of the Classical Paradigm and the Fuzzy Paradigm in Cognition
  • 4.2. Categorial Formation and the Logic of Categorial Conversion
  • 4.2.1. Category Formation in the Logic of Qualitative Transformation
  • 4.2.2. Categorial Conversion in the Logic of Qualitative Transformations
  • 4.3. On the Epistemic Structure of the Categorial Conversion
  • 4.4. Fuzzy Paradigm and the Explication of Qualitative Disposition in the Category Formation and the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 4.4.1. Fuzzy Paradigm, its Nature and Relational Structure to Categorial Conversion
  • 4.4.2. Dualism, Duality and Relational Unity in Categorial Conversion
  • 4.5. Duality, Continuum and Relational Unity in Categorial Conversion under Fuzzy Laws of Thought
  • 4.5.1. Concepts of Duality, Continuum and Relational Unity in Category Formation
  • 4.5.2. Characteristics of Duality in the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • ch. Five Theory of Categorial Conversion: Axiomatic Foundations
  • 5.1. African Intellectual Framework, Fuzzy Paradigm and the Development of the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.2. Reflection on the General Logic in Categorial Conversion
  • 5.2.1. Time Trinity, Actual, Reality, Potential and Perception in Categorial Conversion
  • 5.3. Language, Vocabulary and Grammar of the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.3.1. Logical Blocks of the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.3.1.1. Concerning the Universal Unity and Particular Unity in the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.3.1.2. Concerning the Concepts of Ontology, Ontic, Epistemology, and Epistemic in the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.3.1.3. Concerning Categories and their Formations in the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.3.1.4. Concerning Polarity, Duality, Oppositeness and Unity in the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.4. Essential Definitions and Explications in the Language of the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.4.1. Definitions, Similarities and Differences of Dualism and Duality in the Development of the Laws of Reasoning in the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.4.2. Concerning General, Negative and Positive Characteristic Sets
  • 5.4.3. Relativity of the Negative and Positive Characteristic Sets and Corresponding Actions in Categorial Conversion
  • 5.4.3.1. Concepts of the Actual and Potential in Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.5. Information, Knowledge, Wisdom and Intelligence in Systemicity
  • 5.5.1. Concerning Information, Knowledge, Wisdom and Intelligence in Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.5.1.1. Concerning the Continuum and Quantum in the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.5.1.2. Concerning the Analog and Digital in the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.5.2. Relationality, Polarity, Duality, Information, Matter and Energy
  • 5.5.2.1. Concerning Relationality in Polarity and Duality in the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.5.2.2. Concerning Dualization of Universal Elements, Poles and Polarity
  • 5.5.2.3. Concerning the Multiplicity of Energy in the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.5.2.4. Concerning the Conceptual Pyramid and the Trinity in the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.6. Principles and Laws of Reasoning in the Theory of Categorial conversion in Systemicity
  • 5.6.1. General Africentric Postulates in the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.6.1.1. postulate of existence of infinity and the Transformation from nothingness
  • 5.6.1.2. postulate of conversion through internal dynamics and self-evolution
  • 5.6.1.3. postulate of cognitive independence
  • 5.6.1.4. postulate of actual-potential transformations and substitutions
  • 5.6.2. General Africentic Axioms in the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.6.2.1. Axiom of existence of nothingness-somethingness polarity as the primary Category of universal reality
  • 5.6.2.2. Axiom of categorial conversion and existence of matter
  • 5.6.2.3. Axiom of self-motion, creation, evolution and transformations
  • 5.6.2.4. Axiom of beginning-end polarity, actual-potential polarity and Negative-positive duality in Categorial Conversion
  • 5.7. Essential Postulates, Principles and the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.7.1. Essential Postulates in the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 5.7.1.1. postulate of universal partition
  • 5.7.2. postulate of existence of primary category
  • 5.7.3. postulate of non-sole primary reality of matter
  • 5.7.4. postulate of General categorial conversion
  • 5.7.4(a). postulate of categorial conversion At the Level of Ontology
  • 5.7.4(b). postulate of categorial conversion At the Level of Epistemology
  • 5.7.4(c). postulate of categorial-conversion Identity
  • 5.7.4(d). Concerning the Postulate of categorial Transversality
  • 5.7.5. Africentric Principles of the Opposites of the Universal system
  • 5.7.5.1. Principle of Duality, Relational Continuum and Unity
  • 5.7.5.2. Principle of Polarity and Unity of the Poles
  • 5.7.5.3. principle of relationality and multiplicity of rhythms
  • 5.7.6. Law of Motion, Conversion and Transformations
  • 5.7.6(a). law of interdependence of duals and poles in duality and polarity
  • 5.7.6(b). law of interdependence of mutual negation of poles and duals
  • 5.7.6(c). law of quantitative and qualitative motion
  • 5.7.6(d). law of rhythms
  • ch. Six Theory of Categorial Conversion: The Analytical Building Blocks in Socio-Natural Systemicity
  • 6.1. General Conceptual Structure of Block Analytics
  • 6.2. Characteristic Sets and Categories
  • 6.2.1. Ontology, Epistemology and Categorial Conversion
  • 6.2.2. Polarity, Duality, Continuum, Unity and Categorial Conversion
  • 6.3. Problem of Categorial Conversion Revisited
  • 6.3.1. Conceptual Solution to the Categorial Conversion Problem
  • 6.3.2. More Reflections on the Africentic Roots
  • 6.4. Relationality, Opposites, Conflicts, Energy and Self-Motion
  • 6.4.1. Relationality and Information
  • 6.4.2. Energy, Communication and Self-Motion
  • ch.
  • Seven Theory of Categorial Conversion: Mathematical Foundations, Symbolic Representation and Conditions of Convertibility in Socio-Natural Systemicity
  • 7.1. Discussions on Some Conceptual Difficulties and Solutions
  • 7.2. Reflection on the Theory of Categorial Conversion and Nkrumah's Conceptual System
  • 7.3. Dynamics, Motion and Progress in the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 7.3.1. Concerning the Structure of Quantitative Motion
  • 7.3.2. Structure of Qualitative Motion
  • 7.4. Information Definition and Representation in the Theories of Categorial Formation and Categorial Conversion
  • 7.4.1. Concept and Nature of Information in the Theories of Category Formation and Categorial Conversion
  • 7.4.2. Essential Definitions and Explication of Information and Category Formation
  • 7.4.3. Subjective Information Structure
  • 7.5. Logico-Mathematical Structure of the Theory of Categorial Conversion under Fuzzy Laws of Thought
  • 7.5.1. Concepts of the Actual and Potential in Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 7.5.2. Concepts and Roles of Categories in the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • ch. Eight Mathematical Problem and the Solution to the Categorial Conversion of Actual-Potential Polarity in Socio-Natural Systemicity
  • 8.1. Structures of the Duality, Polarity and the Action Space in Categorial Conversions
  • 8.2. Fuzzy Rationality, Degrees of Effectiveness of the Positive and Negative Actions in Logical Dualization
  • 8.2.1. Actual Duality in the Actual Pole
  • 8.2.2. Potential Duality in the Potential Pole
  • 8.2.3. Relational Interactions, Continuum and Unity in the Actual-Potential Polarity
  • 8.3. Categorial-Conversion Analytics in System Dynamics
  • 8.4. Nature of Categorial-Conversion Moment and its Measure
  • 8.5. Game Theory and the Theory of Categorial Conversion
  • 8.5.1. Types of the Categorial-Conversion Game, Information and Negation of Negation
  • 8.5.2. Information, Paradigm of though and Types of Game Theory
  • 8.5.3. Polarity, Duality, Relationality and Game Theory
  • MULTIDISCIPLINARY REFERENCES.
  • Note continued: R1. On Africa and Foundations of African Thought System
  • R2. Category Theory in Mathematics, Logic and Science
  • R3. Fuzzy Logic in Knowledge Production
  • R4. Fuzzy Mathematics in Approximate Reasoning under Conditions of Inexactness and Vagueness
  • R5. Fuzzy Optimization, Decision-Choices and Approximate Reasoning in Sciences
  • R6. Fuzzy Probability, Fuzzy-Random variable and Random-Fuzzy Variable
  • R7. Ideology and the Knowledge Construction Process
  • R8. Information, Thought and Knowledge
  • R9. Language and Knowledge-Production Process
  • R10. Possible Worlds and the Knowledge Production Process
  • R11. Rationality, Information, Games, Conflicts and Exact Reasoning
  • R12. Rationality and Philosophy of Exact and Inexact Sciences in the Knowledge Production
  • R13. Theory of Planning, the Prescriptive Science and Cost-benefit Analysis in Transformations
  • R14. Social Sciences, Mathematics and the Problems of Exact and Inexact Methods of Thought
  • R15. Transformation, Polarity, Dialectics and Categorial Conversion
  • R16. Vagueness, Approximation, and Reasoning in the Knowledge Development and Categorial Conversion
  • R17. Vagueness and Fuzzy Game Theory in Categorial Conversion and Philosophical Consciencism.