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_Nine Princes in Amber_, by Roger Zelazny |
_Nine Princes in Amber_, by Roger Zelazny |
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+ | [[File:Experiential_Worlds,_Now_With_Maths.png|thumb|left|Divine Charges and Experiential Labors]] |
Revision as of 16:27, 13 March 2018
The concept of Experiential Worlds is an approach to the understanding and analysis of the world we live in, in that it has a meaningful nature to us, and includes the narratives we enjoy or oppose as well as all the real and material features with which we interact. Many Phenomenal Worlds are possible, and the ability to shift from one imaginable world to another allows us to approach our own world from new directions, and to arrive at pieces and forms of knowledge which would otherwise be inaccessible.
Experiential Worlds are independent of the Physical Information of our environs, whether taken to be public, in private confidence, or personally; they are experimental variations and speculative processings of our own internal biosemantics and biosemiotics: the physical information systems of which we ourselves are composed. They are attempts at behavioral adaptations in an environment dominated by the necessities of information, rather than those dominated by considerations of matter or energy.
Further Reading:
_The Act of Creation_ by Arthur Koestler
_Informal Logic: Possible Worlds and Imagination_, by John Eric Nolt
_Nine Princes in Amber_, by Roger Zelazny
Pictures for future pages in this Category
All items (4)