References
Maybe things will also evolve into completely different
directions. Here are some publications that have been
influenced at least partially by ideas from this site.
:)
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Andreas Schöoter. Bipolar Change. Journal of Chinese
Philosophy. Volume 35, Issue 2, p. 297-317 (June 2008).
Abstract
I reconsider the natural characterization of change
and non-change that arises from the algebraic approach: this
sees change as yang in contrast to nonchange, which is yin.
Following a persuasive example from Alain Stalder, rather
than consider change solely in contrast to non-change, I
develop a formal characterization of different forms of change
considered relative to each other. This extension allows the
internal structure of a change to be made explicit in a new
way, bifurcating the change into yang parts and yin parts. I
call this extended definition of change bipolar change.
Links
[Preprint]
[Publication]
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