GPN18:Computational Narratives - Philosophical perspectives on Jupyter Notebook: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

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Ein Vortrag von Max Roßmann auf der [[GPN18]].
Ein Vortrag von Max Roßmann auf der [[GPN18]].


Insights of philosophy and literary theory on the power of Jupyter Notebook:
"Computers are good at consuming, producing and processing data. Humans, on the other hand, process the world through narratives. Thus, in order for data, and the computations that process and visualize that data, to be useful for humans, they must be embedded into a narrative - a computational narrative - that tells a story for a particular audience and context. 
- Meaning in sequentiality, narrative closure and coherence (e.g. Abbot 2011, Culler 2011, MacIntyre 2007)
- First, a single computational narrative needs to span a wide range of contexts and audiences.  
- Authorized props in games of make believe (Walton 1990, Frigg 2010)
- Second, these computational narratives need to be reproducible.
- Third, computational narratives are created in collaboration.“ (Perez and Granger 2015, ipython.org)


Jupyter Notebook:
Questbook: Beginning-Middle-End, Narrative Framing, Narrative Self-Constituion, Narrative Immersion, Representation
"Computers are good at consuming, producing and processing data. Humans, on the other hand, process the world through narratives. Thus, in order for data, and the computations that process and visualize that data, to be useful for humans, they must be embedded into a narrative - a computational narrative - that tells a story for a particular audience and context.“ (Perez and Granger 2015, ipython.org)
 
Adventurers Group: Aristotle, MacIntyre, Walton, Frigg, Salis, Minsc & Boo and some others... 
 
In general, I am very interested in further discussion about your practical experience and thoughts on this!


== Links ==
== Links ==

Aktuelle Version vom 9. Mai 2018, 00:23 Uhr

Ein Vortrag von Max Roßmann auf der GPN18.

"Computers are good at consuming, producing and processing data. Humans, on the other hand, process the world through narratives. Thus, in order for data, and the computations that process and visualize that data, to be useful for humans, they must be embedded into a narrative - a computational narrative - that tells a story for a particular audience and context. - First, a single computational narrative needs to span a wide range of contexts and audiences. - Second, these computational narratives need to be reproducible. - Third, computational narratives are created in collaboration.“ (Perez and Granger 2015, ipython.org)

Questbook: Beginning-Middle-End, Narrative Framing, Narrative Self-Constituion, Narrative Immersion, Representation

Adventurers Group: Aristotle, MacIntyre, Walton, Frigg, Salis, Minsc & Boo and some others...

In general, I am very interested in further discussion about your practical experience and thoughts on this!

Links