Publisher | Springer, Berlin |
Year | |
Pages | 269 |
Version | paperback |
Language | English |
ISBN | 9783030168315 |
Categories | Geographical information systems (GIS) & remote sensing |
The Philosophy of GIS
1. Qingyun Du (Wuhan University): A philosophy perspective on Theoretical Cartography and GIScience
2. N. Chrisman (RMIT University): Realism and ModelsT. Bittner (University of Buffalo): Is there a Quantum Geography?
3. R. Laurini (University of Lyon): Some Philosophical Issues Regarding Mathematical Modeling in GIS 4. Galton (University of Exeter) Space, Time, and the Representation of Geographical Reality [revisited]5. R.G. Winther (University of California Santa Cruz): Is the map really not the territory? Abstraction and Representation in GIS, Cartography, and Science
6. B. Smith (University of Buffalo): On Drawing lines on a Map [revisited]
7. A.C. Varzi (Columbia University in the City of New York): Boundaries: Theory and Practice
8. R. Casati and P. Fernandez (CNRS, Institut Jean Nicod): (Dis)orientation, navigation styles, and GIS
9. Thomasson (Dartmouth College): Geographic Objects and the Science of Geography [revisited]
10. T. Tambassi (University of Bucharest): On the notion of geographical entities: mapping the geo-ontological debate
11. H. Couclelis (University of California Santa Barbara): TBA
12. D.M. Mark (University of Buffalo) and G. Sinha (Ohio University): Ontology design for topographic modeling and analysis
13. C. Pesaresi (Sapienza University of Rome): GIS and education