Abstract :
The history of life can be viewed as a perpetual memory process (PMP) denoted as the pair (K, R), where K is knowledge information that is both shapeless and incorruptible, whereas R is the K realization with opposite properties. We are now faced with an emerging PMP for the huge quantity of human external knowledge, i.e., culture. In this paper, the author proposes that this new PMP should be the target of information systems science, and knowledge compression by the factorization of similar systems in diverse areas is one of its main tasks. In addition, this paper proposes a new academic discipline, semistry, that contributes to a solution side by side with the visual language EPN-PNUT, an extension of the Petri net, which represents our world by a set of local transition rules and tokens.
Keywords :
Petri nets; cultural aspects; information science; information systems; knowledge management; EPN-PNUT; PMP; Petri net; Semi-Gaku; academic discipline; culture; human external knowledge; information systems science; knowledge compression; knowledge information; local transition rules; perpetual memory process; semistry; similar system factorization; tokens; visual language; Computers; DNA; History; Information systems; Petri nets; Vehicles; Visualization; Analysis; Culture; EPN-PNUT; Information System; PMP; Representation; Semistry;
Conference_Titel :
Systems, Man, and Cybernetics (SMC), 2013 IEEE International Conference on