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Discovering Simplicity in a Complex World
Jack S. Cohen, Ian Stewart
ISBN: 9780140246759
Format: Paperback
Publisher:Penguin Books Ltd
Edition: New edition
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Science's traditional answers to "How does complexity arise in nature?" are questioned in this book. The subject-matter of traditional science is re-examined from a different viewpoint, focusing on the ability of complicated rules to generate simple behaviour, through the "collapse of chaos".
Science's traditional answers to the question: "How does complexity arise in nature?" are given at the beginning of this book. It shows how intelligence and human culture can be traced back to atomic structure, reducing the whole of nature to simple laws of fundamental physics. However, the book then proceeds to show that "How does complexity arise?" is really the wrong question. It proposes that a more interesting question is "Why do simple structures exist at all?". Scientific reductionism is useful but does not give the whole truth: it tells how but not why; it looks at insides but not outsides, content but not context. The subject-matter of traditional science is re-examined from a different viewpoint, focusing on the ability of complicated rules to generate simple behaviour, through the "collapse of chaos".
| ISBN | 0140246754 | | Pages | 512 | | ISBN13 | 9780140246759 (What's this?) | | Weight (grammes) | 348 | | Publisher | Penguin Books Ltd | | Published in | London | | Imprint | Penguin Books Ltd | | Series title | Penguin science | | Format | Paperback | | Height (mm) | 198 | | Publication date | 29 Jun 1995 | | Width (mm) | 128 | | DEWEY | 501 | | Spine width (mm) | 21 | | DEWEY edition | DC20 | | Academic level | General, Undergraduate |
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Simplicity and complexity; the laws of nature; the organization of development; the possibilities of evolution; the origins of human understanding; systems of interactive behaviour; complexity and simplicity; the nature of laws; the development of organizations; the evolution of possibilities; the understanding of human origins; the behaviour of interactive systems; complicity and simplexity.
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