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Complexity: The Emerging Science at the Edge of Order and Chaos by [M. Mitchell Waldrop]

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Complexity: The Emerging Science at the Edge of Order and Chaos Kindle Edition

4.4 out of 5 stars 293 ratings

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Review

The Washington Post If you liked Chaos, you'll love Complexity. Waldrop creates the most exciting intellectual adventure story of the year.

Heinz Pagels physicist I am convinced that the nations and people who master the new sciences of complexity will become the economic, cultural, and political superpowers of the next century.

The New York Times Book Review Lucidly shows physicists, biologists, computer scientists and economists swapping metaphors and reveling in the sense that epochal discoveries are just around the corner....[Waldrop] has a special talent for relaying the exhilaration of moments of intellectual insight.

Douglas R. Hofstadter author of
Götel, Esther, Bach One comes away from Complexity both intellectually excited by ideas and emotionally involved with the people struggling to formulate them. This is a deep tale of science in the making. --This text refers to the paperback edition.

From the Back Cover

In a rented convent in Santa Fe, a revolution has been brewing. The activists are not anarchists, but rather Nobel Laureates in physics and economics such as Murray Gell-Mann and Kenneth Arrow, and pony-tailed graduate students, mathematicians, and computer scientists down from Los Alamos. They've formed an iconoclastic think tank called the Santa Fe Institute, and their radical idea is to create a new science called complexity. These mavericks from academe share a deep impatience with the kind of linear, reductionist thinking that has dominated science since the time of Newton. Instead, they are gathering novel ideas about interconnectedness, coevolution, chaos, structure, and order - and they're forging them into an entirely new, unified way of thinking about nature, human social behavior, life, and the universe itself. They want to know how a primordial soup of simple molecules managed to turn itself into the first living cell - and what the origin of life some four billion years ago can tell us about the process of technological innovation today. They want to know why ancient ecosystems often remained stable for millions of years, only to vanish in a geological instant - and what such events have to do with the sudden collapse of Soviet communism in the late 1980s. They want to know why the economy can behave in unpredictable ways that economists can't explain - and how the random process of Darwinian natural selection managed to produce such wonderfully intricate structures as the eye and the kidney. Above all, they want to know how the universe manages to bring forth complex structures such as galaxies, stars, planets, bacteria, plants, animals, and brains. There are commonthreads in all of these queries, and these Santa Fe scientists seek to understand them. Complexity is their story: the messy, funny, human story of how science really happens. Here is the tale of Brian Arthur, the Belfast-born economist who stubbornly pushed his theories of economic change in the face of hostile orthodoxy. Here, too, are the stories of Stuart Kauffman, the physician-turned-theorist whose most passionate desire has been to find the principles of evolutionary order and organization that Darwin never knew about; John Holland, the affable computer scientist who developed profoundly original theories of evolution and learning as he labored in obscurity for thirty years; Chris Langton, the one-time hippie whose close brush with death in a hang-glider accident inspired him to create the new field of artificial life; and Santa Fe Institute founder George Cowan, who worked a lifetime in the Los Alamos bomb laboratory, until - at age sixty-three - he set out to start a scientific revolution. Most of all, however, Complexity is the story of how these scientists and their colleagues have tried to forge what they like to call "the sciences of the twenty-first century". --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B07WVV5J2R
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Open Road Media (1 October 2019)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 5308 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 376 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 out of 5 stars 293 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
4.4 out of 5
293 global ratings

Top reviews from India

Reviewed in India 🇮🇳 on 27 March 2022
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Reviewed in India 🇮🇳 on 9 June 2018
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4.0 out of 5 stars Not just the history of Santa Fe Institute. This book is much more.
By Digital Panache on 9 June 2018
Not just the history of Santa Fe Institute. This book is much more.
While it is truly the story of how Santa Fe came into being, it is also about WHY it was instituted. This book is mostly for common people (not for scientists or experts) to read about what the benefits and limitations of some scientific fields are and why it was required to bring them all together on a common pedestal and combine the knowledge of multiple fields.
A good book. Though I wish, it was a bit more coherent in its story telling.
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Reviewed in India 🇮🇳 on 11 April 2018
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