Complexity

a guided tour

English language

Published Jan. 5, 2009 by Oxford University Press.

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5 stars (1 review)

From the inside of the cover jacket:

WHAT ENABLES INDIVIDUALLY simple insects like ants to act with such precision and purpose as a group? How do trillions of individual neurons produce something as extraordinarily complex as consciousness? What is it that guides self-organizing structures like the immune system, the World Wide Web, the global economy, and the human genome? These are just a few of the fascinating and elusive questions that the science of complexity seeks to answer.

In this remarkably accessible and companionable book, leading complex systems scientist Melanie Mitchell provides an intimate, detailed tour of the sciences of complexity, a broad set of efforts that seek to explain how large-scale complex, organized, and adaptive behavior can emerge from simple interactions among myriad individuals. Comprehending such systems requires a wholly new approach, one that goes beyond traditional scientific reductionism and that re-maps longstanding disciplinary boundaries. Based on her work …

1 edition

Subjects

  • Complexity (Philosophy)