- }}Knott, Bill. Nights of Naomi. Barn Dream Press. Boston. 1971.Google Scholar
- }}Wikipedia. "Superstring Theory."Google Scholar
- }}yesyesnono photostream. Flickr.com. 2010.Google Scholar
- }}Jackson Pollock.Google Scholar
- }}Sanda Illescu.Google Scholar
- }}Kevin J. Sullivan. Personal communication.Google Scholar
- }}Kuhn, Thomas. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. University Of Chicago Press. 1996.Google Scholar
- }}Wikipedia. "Positivism."Google Scholar
- }}Lakatos, Imre; Feyerabend, Paul. For and Against Method. Edited by Matteo Motterlini. University of Chicago Press, Chicago & London. 1999.Google Scholar
- }}Latour, Bruno. Science in Action: How to Follow Scientists and Engineers through Society. Harvard University Press. Cambridge, MA. 1988.Google Scholar
- }}Crawford, Matthew, B. Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work. Penguin. New York. 2009.Google Scholar
- }}Langley, Pat; Simon, Herbert A.; Bradshaw, Gary L; Zytkow, Jan M. Scientific Discovery: Computational Explorations of the Creative Processes. The MIT Press. Cambridge, MA. 1987. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- }}Turchi, Peter. Maps of the Imagination: The Writer as Cartographer. Trinity University Press. 2004.Google Scholar
- }}Stafford, William. Writing the Australian Crawl. University of Michigan Press. Ann Arbor. 1987.Google Scholar
- }}Hass, Robert. Personal communication. Squaw Valley, CA. 2008.Google Scholar
- }}Okrent, Arika. In the Land of Invented Languages: Esperanto Rock Stars, Klingon Poets, Loglan Lovers, and the Mad Dreamers Who Tried to Build A Perfect Language. Spiegel & Grau. New York. 2009.Google Scholar
- }}Baniassad, Elisa; Myers, Clayton. "An Exploration of Program as Language." Proceedings of the 24th ACM SIGPLAN Conference on Object-Oriented Programming, Systems, Languages, and Applications. Orlando. 2009. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- }}Frost, Robert. New Hampshire. Henry Holt. New York. 1923.Google Scholar
- }}Hartshorne, Charles; Weiss, Paul. Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, Volumes I and II: Principles of Philosophy and Elements of Logic. Harvard University Press. Cambridge, MA. 1958.Google Scholar
- }}Feynman, Richard. A Life in Science. Dutton. New York. 1997.Google Scholar
- }}Burch, Robert. "Charles Sanders Peirce." Zalta, Edward-N. ed. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Stanford University. Winter 2008 edition. 2008.Google Scholar
- }}Aliseda-Llera, Atocha. Seeking Explanations: Abduction in Logic, Philosophy of Science, and Artificial Intelligence. Stanford University Ph.D. Dissertation, Department of Philosophy. 1997. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- }}Hanson, N. R. Patterns of Scientific Discovery. Cambridge University Press. New York. 1961.Google Scholar
- }}Paavola, Sami. "Abduction as a logic and methodology of discovery: The importance of strategies." Foundations of Science, 9(3):267--283. 2004.Google Scholar
Cross Ref
- }}Itoh, Toshio. A New Approach to Future Enterprises: Abduction for Creativity. Ohmsha, Ltd. Tokyo. 1996.Google Scholar
- }}Martin, Roger. The Design of Business: Why Design is the Next Competitive Advantage. Harvard Business Press. Boston, MA. 2009.Google Scholar
- }}Boswell, R., The Half-Known World: On Writing Fiction. Graywolf Press. St. Paul, MN. 2008.Google Scholar
- }}Galenson, David W. Old Masters and Young Geniuses: The Two Lifecycles of Artistic Creativity. Princeton University Press. Princeton, NJ. 2007.Google Scholar
- }}Weizenbaum, Joseph. Computer Power and Human Reason. Penguin. New York. 1984.Google Scholar
- }}Picasso, Pablo. 1923 interview.Google Scholar
- }}http://dreamsongs.com/Files/ImplicitLearningStories.pdf. From Proulx & Heine {33}.Google Scholar
- }}Camus, Albert. "An Absurd Reasoning." The Myth of Sisyphus and other essays. J. O'Brien editor and translator. Vintage Books. New York. 1955.Google Scholar
- }}Proulx, Travis; Heine, Steven J. "Connections From Kafka: Exposure to Meaning Threats Improves Implicit Learning of an Artificial Grammar." Psychological Science. Vol. 20, No. 9. 2009.Google Scholar
- }}Hall, Joseph M.; Johnson, M. Eric. "When Should a Process Be Art, Not Science?" Harvard Business Review. Cambridge, MA. March 2009.Google Scholar
Index Terms
Better science through art
Recommendations
Knowledge art: Artwork and invention
ARTECH 2021: 10th International Conference on Digital and Interactive ArtsThis paper depicts a dialogue between art and technology, by examining coincidences and differences between artworks and inventions, their conditions and stakes. By examining these categories through the same lenses, this approach hopes to build bridges ...
Better science through art
OOPSLA '10: Proceedings of the ACM international conference on Object oriented programming systems languages and applicationsHow do artists and scientists work? The same.
Interrelations between Art, Science and Research
ARTECH 2019: Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Digital and Interactive ArtsFrom the assumption that there is a difference between an artistic practice in itself and a practice in art such as academic research, or rather, that within the scope of the visual arts, there is a distinction between a lato-sensu research and a ...







Comments