Kenneth E. Boulding (1910–1993) British-American economist
Source: 1960s, Beyond Economics: Essays on Society, 1968, p. 142
Source: 1960s, Beyond Economics: Essays on Society, 1968, p. 142
Kenneth E. Boulding (1910–1993) British-American economist
Source: 1960s, Beyond Economics: Essays on Society, 1968, p. 142
Kenneth E. Boulding (1910–1993) British-American economist
Kenneth Boulding (1977) Economic Development as an Evolutionary System, Fifth World Congress of the International Economic Association, Tokyo, Aug.-Sept. 1977.
1970s
“The importance of information is directly proportional to its improbability.”
Jerry Pournelle book Lucifer's Hammer
Lucifer's Hammer (1985)
Dennis Gabor (1900–1979) Nobel Prize-winning physicist and inventor of holography
"Optical transmission" in Information Theory : Papers Read at a Symposium on Information Theory (1952), as cited in Living Systems (1978) by James Grier Miller, p. 12
Context: Incomplete knowledge of the future, and also of the past of the transmitter from which the future might be constructed, is at the very basis of the concept of information. On the other hand, complete ignorance also precludes communication; a common language is required, that is to say an agreement between the transmitter and the receiver regarding the elements used in the communication process...
[The information of a message can] be defined as the 'minimum number of binary decisions which enable the receiver to construct the message, on the basis of the data already available to him.' These data comprise both the convention regarding the symbols and the language used, and the knowledge available at the moment when the message started.
Ikujiro Nonaka (1935) Japanese business theorist
Source: The Knowledge-creating Company, 1995, p. 95