Philosophy
Horn, R. E., Some of Philosophy's Next Jobs (2003) This talk was delivered at the First European Conference on Computers and Philosophy at the University of Glasgow, March 28, 2003. (Powerpoint)
Horn, R. E. (2002) Beginning to Conceptualize the Human Cognome Project A paper prepared for the National Science Foundation Conference on Converging Technologies (Nano-Bio-Info-Cogno) Draft 4/30/02 (PDF)
Horn, R. E., (2002) Infrastructure for Navigation of Interdisciplinary Debates; Critical Decisions for Representing Argumentation . A draft chapter prepared for the forthcoming book Visualizing Argumentation; Tools for Collaborative and Educational Sense-Making (PDF)
Horn, R. E., (2000) The Representation of Meaning: Visual Information Design as a Practical and Fine Art (A speech prepared for the InfoArcadia Exhibit, the Stroom Center for the Visual Arts, The Hague, The Netherlands, April 3, 2000) (PDF)
Horn, R. E., (2000) Teaching Philosophy with Argumentation Maps Newsletter of the American Philosophical Association, November 2000 (html) (PDF)
Horn, R. E., (1999) Using Argumentation Analysis to Examine History and Status of a Major Debate in Artificial Intelligence and Philosophy. Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference of the International Society for the Study of Argumentation. SIC SAT. June 16-19, 1998. Amsterdam--The Netherlands. (PDF) ( Downloadable Figure 1 ) ( Downloadable Figure 2 )
Horn, R. E.(1983) Trialectics: Toward a Practical Logic of Unity (Ed.). Lexington, I.R.I. (out of print)
Horn, R. E. (1983) Traps of Traditional Logic and Dialectics: What They Are and How to Avoid Them, Lexington Institute (html) (PDF)
Horn, R. E., Yoshimi, J. et. al., (1998) Mapping Great Debates: Can Computers Think? MacroVU®, Inc.Bainbridge Island, WA. (seven posters) Description || Reviews || Order from Publisher
Horn, R. E., Livingston, P., (2000) Mapping Great Debates: Consciousness (html)
Can Computers Think? Newsletter Archives
CCT UPDATE 2000.1 (html)
CCT UPDATE 2001.1 (html)