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Complexification:
Explaining a Paradoxical World Through the Science of Surprise

 
  by John L. Casti, J. L. Casti
 
 
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By The Numbers
 Product Details

  Format: Paperback, 307 pages
  Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  ISBN: 0060925876
  Release Date: Jan 1, 2003


 
 
Cover to Cover
 In Brief
Casti, a mathematician at the Santa Fe Institute, "concerns himself {here} with why predictions fail, hence the seemingly oxymoronic term 'science of surprise.' Many aspects of Casti's . . . discussion are philosophical. He ponders the nature of paradox and the limitations of 'conventional wisdom,' and wonders about how the 'slipperiness' of language affects science. These andrelated concerns underlie his approach to 'surprises,' which he organizes into categories: the catastrophic, the chaotic, the lawless, the irreducible, andthe emergent. As he defines each of these terms, provides examples, and suggests methods for their observation and analysis, he works back and forth from the simple to the complex, from natural systems to the . . . realm of mathematics, from time to music, and from evolution to artificial intelligence." (Booklist) Index.

 
 
 From The Publisher
Why does time seem to fly on some occasions and drag on others? Why do some societies seem more prone to totalitarianism than others? Why does atonal music sound "worse" to most of us than traditional music? How can a butterfly in Brazil affect the weather in Alaska? The set of ingenious interdisciplinary approaches that are, together, called the science of complexity offers answers to these and dozens of other questions that beg the larger question of why our universe seems so paradoxical. John L. Casti, renowned mathematician and science writer, argues that a complexity that defies human logic is only natural, and he shows directly, engagingly, and with a wealth of illustrations how complexity arises and how it works. Casti explores several types of phenomena that have, until now, consistently eluded science's attempts to understand them: the catastrophic, where a tiny change in a system produces a huge effect (as happens in earthquakes or political revolutions); the chaotic, which includes odd correlations like the ones that make predicting the weather or the stock market so difficult; paradox, in which you follow a commonsense rule and still something weird happens (the more lanes you add to the freeway, for example, the bigger the traffic jams); the irreducible, where, as in novels, symphonies and baseball games, the whole is greater than the sum of its parts; the emergent, in which a pattern, like life itself, seems to arise from out of nowhere. These phenomena encompass many of the most fascinating and important events and processes in science, the arts, nature, the economy, and everyday life. With authority and wit, this myth-shattering book explains how science is at last shedding light on some of the most perennially mystifying phenomena. It also offers a groundbreaking primer in what Casti calls "the science of surprise," a revolutionary approach to solving a welter of mysteries great and small.

 
 
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Table of Contents
 
Preface
Acknowledgments
1The Simple and the Complex: Realities, Rules and Surprises1
In the Beginning is the Wor(l)d1
Rules of Reality11
Patterns, Puzzles and Paradoxes15
It's All in the Motion25
2The Catastrophic: Intuition: Small, gradual changes in causes give rise to small, gradual changes in effects43
Continuity and Common Sense43
The Fall of the Wall and the Collapse of a Beam48
The Magnificent Seven57
Physics and Metaphysics65
The Theater of the Absurd80
3The Chaotic: Intuition: Deterministic rules of behavior give rise to completely predictable events85
Expecting the Unexpected85
Recipes for Randomness88
Statistically Speaking98
Bulls, Bears and Beer102
Computing the Cosmos113
4The Lawless: Intuition: All real-world truths are the logical outcome of following a set of rules115
The Power of Paradox115
Reality Rules120
Magic Machines and Busy Beavers125
Truth Is Stranger Than Proof138
Out-Godeling Godel143
Real Brains, Artificial Minds150
Minds, Machines and Evolution166
5The Irreducible: Intuition: Complicated systems can always be understood by breaking them down into simpler parts171
Getting It Together171
Making Connections185
The Time of Your Life198
Some Surprising Connections205
6The Emergent: Intuition: Surprising behavior results only from complicated, hard-to-understand interactions among a system's component parts212
Checkerboard Computers213
That's Life?221
The Most Complicated Thing in the World229
From Bach to Rock and Bach Again242
Climbing the Devil's Staircase249
7The Simply Complex: On the Creation of a Science of Surprise260
The Anatomy of Surprise260
"Complexification"269
The Science of Surprise274
To Dig Deeper279
Index309


 
 
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All Topics > Science > Mathematics > Chaos & Systems
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 People like you also bought:

Complexity: Life at the Edge of Chaos, by Roger Lewin

At Home in the Universe: The Search for the Laws of Self-Organization and Complexity, by Stuart Kauffman

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

Hidden Order: How Adaptation Builds Complexity, by John H. Holland

Emergence: From Chaos to Order, by John H. Holland

Paradigms Regained: A Further Exploration of the Mysteries of Modern Science, by John L. Casti

Emergence: The Connected Lives of Ants, Brains, Cities, and Software, by Steven Johnson

Paradigms Lost: Tackling the Unanswered Mysteries of Modern Science, by John L. Casti

At Home in the Universe: The Search for the Laws of Self-Organization and Complexity, by Stuart Kauffman

 
 
 Keywords
Science/Mathematics, Science, System Theory, Physics, Chaotic behavior in systems, Paradox

 
 
 FastFind Line
Inverse Black Hole
By the Numbers
By the Numbers
Cover To Cover
Cover to Cover
Reader's Corner
Reader's Corner
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Related Reading
Related Reading
Inverse Black Hole
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