META-SUBJECTIVITY OF THE THIRD ARTIFICIAL NATURE: A RECURSIVE APPROACH
Andrey Anatolievich Kuznechenkov
Samara National Research University named after Academician S.P. Korolev, Samara, Russia
Keywords: meta-subjectivity, meta-dualism, automata cybernetics, G`del completeness, conscient aspect
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to determine the content of transformations of the category of “subjectivity” in post-non-classical meta-subjective self-developing models of scientific knowledge (V.S. Stepin, V.E. Lepsky), in the second and third artificial natures (A.Yu. Nesterov). The cybernetic approach ensures the interdisciplinary nature of the study and allows for collecting and using results obtained in various fields of cybernetic knowledge. The “terminological gap” identified in the definition of the research field is filled by the concept of “automata cybernetics”, which refers to technical systems for information processing. The self-developing nature of post-non-classical models allows for the identification and capture of the conscient (from the Latin conscientia - consciousness) aspect of self-developing models. The development of a recursive paradigm (Y. Hui) and research in the field of algorithmic thinking (V.V. Tselishchev) make it possible to use a recursive approach to analyze the category of “meta-subjectivity”. A processual approach based on a procedural understanding of the world (V.A. Lektorsky, A.V. Smirnov) is used to reveal the essence of the connection between the categories of “subject” and “meta-subject” in self-developing models. The obtained results suggest that in the near future, the field of automata cybernetics will represent a space for the global synthesis of socio-legal, psychological, and ethical knowledge in the formal-logical and algorithmic environment of cybernetics for the implementation of the conscient aspect of meta-subjectivity in models of the third artificial nature. This determines the content of the transformation of the category of “subjectivity” in post-non-classical meta-subjective self-developing models of scientific knowledge.
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