Memetic Engineering for Permanent Education in Line with Sustainable Growth
Author(s) -
Cristina I. Brumar,
Ralf Fabian,
Mișu-Jan Manolescu,
Violeta Chiș
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
international journal of computers communications and control
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.422
H-Index - 33
eISSN - 1841-9844
pISSN - 1841-9836
DOI - 10.15837/ijccc.2012.5.1076
Subject(s) - bounded rationality , rationality , memetic algorithm , computer science , sustainable development , component (thermodynamics) , key (lock) , sociology , bounded function , knowledge management , management science , ecology , artificial intelligence , mathematics , economics , epistemology , local search (optimization) , biology , philosophy , physics , computer security , thermodynamics , mathematical analysis
Given the recent point of view of the European Commission regarding the implementation of a new strategy for sustainable growth and jobs, this paper emphasises the opportunity and urgency of supporting the EU 2020 strategy, providing an appropriate educational tool for the knowledge society. The main objectives are: a. adapting memetic engineering expressed in terms of General System Theory to the teaching component of permanent education based on bounded rationality and "Just in Time"as key tools for fighting cognitive chaoplexity in the post-industrial era; b. facilitating the use of memetic engineering based on its double-faceted nature: as both positive and negative feedback; c. extending the applicability of memetic engineering to ecology as source of memes; d. exemplifying the above in primitive metamodels applying memetic engineering in ecology and highlighting the relevant design-space dimensions. Among the conclusions: a. to be sustainable in the long run permanent education must be modelled in line with learner bounded rationality, since bounded rationality is a psychological lasting feature; b. sustainable development depends on affordable permanent education; c. as a result, e-teaching should be systematically revisited through intense transdisciplinary research.
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