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Korzybski: A Biography [Paperback]

Bruce I Kodish

Price: £21.00 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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"That's a crazy book!" Albert Einstein said in the early 1950s, when asked his impression of Alfred Korzybski's 1933 work "Science and Sanity". More than a decade later, Richard Feynman found Korzybski's notion of "time-binding" crucial for answering the question "What is science?".

Feynman didn't know that it was Alfred Korzybski who had coined the term "time-binding" in his first, 1921, book "Manhood of Humanity" to label what he considered the defining characteristic of humans: the potential of each generation to start where the former leaves off and thus to accumulate useful knowledge at an ever-accelerating rate. In the exact sciences and technology, time-binding seems to work reasonably well. In the rest of human life, not so much. Korzybski, a patriotic Polish nobleman and an engineer who had lived under Tsarist tyranny and had seen the horrors of World War I on the Eastern Front before coming to the United States, realized the results of the disparity between rapid but narrow scientific-technological advancement and broader but snail-paced ethical-social development: a seemingly endless cycle of crises, revolutions and wars. Seeking a way out, he studied a broad range of disciplines from physics to psychiatry-fields that others felt had little to do with each other-and discovered factors of sanity in physico-mathematical methods. Comparing the ways of thinking that scientists and mathematicians exemplify when working at their best and the ways of thinking that they and other people unsanely or insanely tend to use the rest of the time, Korzybski linked science and sanity in a new world outlook with an accompanying methodology (labeled 'general semantics')-simple enough to teach children.

Traces of Korzybski's pioneering work can be found today in a variety of fields such as cognitive science, cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy, communication, media ecology, medicine, organizational development, philosophical counseling and philosophy, etc. In spite of this, Korzybski's radically interdisciplinary work remains relatively unassimilated into standard academic fields and hard to accurately fit into familiar popular categories. Thus, Korzybski, who originated the saying "The map is not the territory", remains a relatively neglected and misunderstood figure, shrouded in controversy: some people have considered him a genius while others have called him a crank. Drawing on an array of sources including Korzybski's personal correspondence, notes, scrapbooks, and both published and unpublished writings, as well as personal discussions and interviews with some of Korzybski's closest co-workers, Bruce I. Kodish situates Korzybski's contributions in the context of his times and provides surprising insights into his work as a whole. Kodish's clear prose provides a compellingly readable narrative of Korzybski's very busy, sometimes too busy, exciting and exhausting life while making accessible some of the most complex areas of Korzybski's thought. For years to come, this outstanding biography will remain the standard work on Alfred Korzybski's extraordinarily adventurous and significant life and work.


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Amazon.com:  3 reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
The Remarkable Story of Alfred Korzybski 21 July 2011
By Scot MacKenneth - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This book supplies all that I would want in a biography: to know the person, his times, and why he was important. I doubt if anyone could read this book and not come away thinking that here had been a great man. His greatness stemmed from his incredible will, his resolve to study and toil ceaselessly, passing on what he had learned, and then created, to his fellow man.

For some, I imagine the hard part of this book will be its length and density of detail, but for me personally, I was thirsty for every bit of information. Yet, I imagine that just about everyone is likely to enjoy the many fun moments sprinkled generously throughout the book, e.g., the retelling of Korzybski's very early opposition to Adolf Hitler in the 1930s, a loathing that he was not at all shy about publicizing. The book recounts how one of Korzybski's friends, a distinguished psychiatrist, sent him a furious letter criticizing his so-unfair treatment of "poor little Hitler"! That made me laugh.

Whether it's Korzybski pulling out his pistol and shooting a full wineglass out of the hand of the man who had swiped it from him at a drinking party, or dueling with swords in the capitals of Europe, or innocently riding out on horseback like Don Quixote against artillery barrages on the Russian Front during World War I, or confronting a tough boss of the Longshoreman's Union in New York Harbor, you are in for a treat.

But when you come down to it, Korzybski's life was all about his work -- and his interaction with his hundreds of students, his colleagues, and some of the greatest thinkers of the Twentieth Century. This is the story of the creation of "general semantics," a new discipline for self-advancement, and Bruce Kodish tells the story so well. Whether you are a supporter or detractor of his work, you may think you know Alfred Korzybski but this book will disabuse you of that notion for sure.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Worthwhile reading 14 Sep 2011
By Laura Bertone - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
I found "Korzybski: A Biography" fascinating reading about a man well-worth knowing. Alfred Korzybski was inspired by his honest quest for human improvement at individual and species levels. He anticipated our current challenges and developed answers within a framework of modern science. Author Bruce I. Kodish seems both careful and bold about sources and background, about positive and not so positive aspects of his subject's personality, endeavors, teachings and books. He includes interesting details about everyday life in the first half of the 20th century, mostly in Europe and the United States. Readers will enjoy following Korzybski's adventures as he developed his life's work, `general semantics'.
A Great Life Restored 17 Nov 2011
By Bill Sharp - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Bruce Kodish has done a fabulous job not only of presenting the life and work of a man of considerable genius but telling the story of a very human being who lead an extremely interesting life. This book is long, long, overdue. Alfred Korzybski left a legacy of books and articles but little was known of his life. Kodish has brought him to life. Korzybski was a well known and very influential figure in his day. His work is at least as applicable today as it was in his day. Kodish has given us a new chance to understand both the man and the work in a very readable book.
Bill Sharp

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