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The act of creation

Front Cover
13 Reviews
Hutchinson, Nov 29, 1976 - Psychology - 748 pages

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Review: The Act of Creation

User Review  - Frank - Goodreads

Book 1: Convincing, well developed answers to important questions previously only vaguely intuited. Book 2: Science is outdated, sometimes egregiously wrong, but there are also important insights. A leitmotif is the concept of encapsulation. He also anticipates Minsky's agent model. Read full review

Review: The Act of Creation

User Review  - Leslie - Goodreads

Great treatise on scientific and artistic creativity, and their overlaps. Amazingly, still very relevant today! Read full review

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Contents

From the Foreword to the First Edition by Professor
15
Preface to the Second Danube Edition
23
n LAUGHTER AND EMOTION
51
Copyright

44 other sections not shown

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References to this book

From Google Scholar

An Organizational Learning Framework: From Intuition to Institution
Mary M Crossan, Henry W Lane, Roderick E White - 1999 - Academy of Management Review
Absorptive Capacity: A Review, Reconceptualization, and Extension
Shaker A Zahra, Gerard George - 2002 - Academy of Management Review
Hierarchical ordering of sequential processes
EW Dijkstra - 1971 - Acta Informatica
Specificity of Virus-Immune Effector T Cells for H-2K or H-2D ...
PC Doherty, RV Blanden, RM Zinkernagel, PC Doherty, RV Blanden, RM Zinkernagel - 1976 - Immunological Reviews
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About the author (1976)

Arthur Koestler was born on September 5, 1905 in Budapest, Hungary and studied at the University of Vienna. Koestler was a Middle East correspondent for several German newspapers, wrote for the Manchester Guardian, the London Times and the New York Herald Tribune. Koestler wrote Darkness at Noon, which centers on the destructiveness of politics, The Act of Creation, a book about creativity, and The Ghost in the Machine, which bravely attacks behaviorism. Arthur Koestler died in London on March 3, 1983.

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