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Contents
I. The Essence of Systemology and its Concepts
1.1 Primary Concepts of Systemology (The Logic of Systems)
1.2 Precise Terminological Definitions and Complex Primary Concepts
1.3 Reflex Development of These Concepts
The "reflex" of the link as an exchange and the flow interpretation of linkage.
Current characteristics of object properties.
The Correlation between quality, quantity, form, function and structure.
1.4 The Measurement and Degree of an Object's Systemisation
Adaptation and Adaptive Objects
The Substance and Material of an Object with the Required Field of Functional states.
The optimally adapted (or perfected) object
1.5 The Essence of the System, and the Foundations of its development and Determinants
The foundation, the essence, and the essential and "essence" properties of the system.
Necessity and chance in the interaction of systems
Contradiction, and foundation as a condition for its solution
THE CATEGORY OF CONDITION AND THE SYSTEM AS THE CRUX OF THE MATTER.
THE PRINCIPLES OF COMPARISON AND THE DETERMINANTS OF SYSTEMS
1.6 The Comparability, Functionality, Essentiality and Use of Systems
Functionality, Essentiality and Use.
Comparison of the examined categories of the systemic approach with the categories of Aristotle.
2.1 Reflection as a Property of Adaptive Systems
The Topicality of the problem of the nature of reflection.
The Nature of Deformations as bases of reflection.
Factors involved when a reflecting object is similar to the reflected object and to itself.
2.2 Anticipation and Advanced Reflection
Resonance Advance Reflection of Dynamic Objects
Anticipation for Advanced Reflection as a Genetic Prequisite for Higher Forms of Reflection.
Certain other conceptions of reflection.
Directing Influence and Intential Variety as Prerequisites of Control and Information Mechanisms.
Alienated properties, Informing and types of Informing
Types of Diversity with Informing.
A comparison of concepts of reflection processes so far introduced with certain concepts of ancient Greek philosophy.
2.3 Adaptive Intensification of Reflective Properties
Conditions for Facilitating Adaptive Processes through a Material's Reflective Potentials.
Necessity, Condition, Cause and Motive
The Simplest Substance Properties of the System under Adaptation. Reception Zones.
Usual and Occasional combinative Intential forms; Formation and Functioning of Adaptation.
2.4 Symbols for Designating Objects and their Properties in Acts of Reflection and Functioning
Methods of designating static characteristics of patterns and original patterns.
Resemblance and Continguity Relationships and Methods of Designating them
The Rules of the Reflection of Multi-component Original Patterns.
The Rules of Resonsances and Preferences.
A priori identification and the formation a posteriori gestalt.
Formalo-Logical Abstractions and Essence Abstractions as forms of Reflection.
The properties of a generalised pattern and the formalo-logical abstraction.
The Nature of the pattern of Essence.
The Distinction of Essence Abstractions from Formalogical Abstractions.
The Utilitarian and the Essence, the Formal and the Meaningful in Abstractions during Formation.
The Interaction of the Identification and Recognition Processes.
III. Semiotics, Natural Language and Man-Machine Intercourse
3.1 Systemization of Basic Concepts of Semiotics
The sign, the denoter, and the sign situation
Classification of Individual Signs.
Izaesthetic Interpreters, Izogenic patterns, Reversible Stimulations and Reflections.
The Communicative Situation and the Communicative Act.
Pre-sign, and the simplest sign, communication.
Types of Communicative Arcs and Links, Abstract and Concrete Links.
3.2 Types of Communicative Systems
Nomenclature and calculations as the simplest Communicative Systems
The simplest occasional communicative systems.
Meaning, sense, the linguistic sign, the speech sign, the moneme, and natural language.
QUESTIONS OF SECONDARINESS AND OF THE MATERIAL NATURE OF SIGNS AND MEANINGS.
Meanings as specific communicative abstractions.
The limited number of meanings and the limitless number of senses.
Linguistic thinking, language, and speech.
Cognominative syntactic meanings and senses.
3.5 Natural Language and Meaningful Man-Machine Intercourse
Modelling, Structural Modelling, Sign Modelling.
Structuralism, Systemic Approach, and Generative Grammars.
The principles of translation of natural language texts by means of an information computer.
Ways of effecting machine translation in practice.
Conditions of the formal deductability of senses.
Prime sources of the compatibility of Senses of Elementary Utterances.
Features of sense revelation of the properties of economics texts denoters.
Conditions for realising meaningful discourse with a machine.
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