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  1. Bateson, Gregory. Naven : um esboço dos problemas sugeridos por um retrato compósi-to, realizado a partir de três perspectivas, da cultura de uma tribo da Nova Guiné / Gregory Bateson ; tradução Magda Lopes. – 2. ed. – São Paulo : Editora da Universidade de São Paulo, 2006. 384 p. : il. ; 25 cm. (Clássicos; 26)

  2. 14 de abr. de 2021 · Mind and nature : a necessary unity. Introduction -- Every schoolboy knows ... -- Multiple versions of the world -- Criteria of mental process -- Multiple versions of relationship -- The great stochastic processes -- From classification to process -- So what? -- Appendix: Time is out of joint.

  3. Gregory Bateson was fond of quoting Heracleitus: "Into the same river no man can step twice," particularly in his later work, in which he was trying to define the nature of the interface between the realm of mind and physical reality, and to discuss the way in which mental process establishes landmarks or thresholds, meanings and

  4. 31 de dez. de 2014 · Pdf_module_version 0.0.22 Ppi 360 Rcs_key 24143 Republisher_date 20230321095256 Republisher_operator associate-jessa-lubiano@archive.org Republisher_time 398 Scandate 20230313081538 Scanner station45.cebu.archive.org Scanningcenter

  5. Gregory Bateson, antropólogo, possuía formação inicial no campo das ciências naturais, era interessado pelo estudo das relações humanas e dedicou. a vida ao conhecimento e compreensão das regras que regem as trocas de informação entre os indivíduos.

  6. Entre junho de 1936 e fevereiro de 1938, Margaret Mead e Gregory Bateson empreenderam em Bali, no vilarejo de Bajoeng Gede, uma aventura científica que iria marcar profundamente a antropologia. Dessa aventura resultaram 25.000 negativos fotográficos e quase 7.000 metros de película cinematográfica que deram origem a um livro, Balinese ...

  7. monoskop.org › Bateson_Gregory_Mind_and_NatureMIND - Monoskop

    GREGORY BATESON was born in 1904, the son of William Bateson, a leading British biologist and a pioneering geneticist. Resisting family pressures to fol­ low in his father's footsteps, he completed his degree in anthropology instead of the natural sciences, and left England to do field work in New Guinea. It was