<p>In the context of recent natural disasters and the increase of global terrorism, there is a need for a greater understanding of the psychosocial impact of such events on the individuals and communities involved. This understanding can also enhance the support offered to people sho have to face tr
Emergence: From Chaos to Order
โ Scribed by John H. Holland
- Publisher
- Oxford University Press
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 271
- Series
- Helix Books
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
In Emergence, Holland demonstrates that a small number of rules of laws can generate systems of surprising complexity. Board games provide an ancient and direct example: Chess is defined by fewer than two dozen rules, but the myriad patterns that result lead to perpetual novelty and emergence. It took centuries of study to recognize certain patterns of play, such as the control of pawn formations. But once recognized, these patterns greatly enhance the possibility of winning the game. The discovery of similar patterns in other facets of our world opens the way to a deeper understanding of the complexity of life, answering such questions as: How does a fertilized egg program the development of a trillion-cell organism? How can we build human organizations that respond rapidly to change through innovation? Throughout the book, Holland compares different systems and models that exhibit emergence in the quest for common rules or laws.
โฆ Table of Contents
1 Before we Proceed..............1
2 Games and Numbers..............16
3 Maps Game Theory ComputerBaseil Modeling..............28
4 Checkers..............53
5 Neural Nets..............81
6 Toward a General Setting..............115
7 Constrained Generating Procedures..............125
8 Samuels Checkersplayer and Other Models as Cgp s..............143
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
This work, written for a wide audience of students and general readers, details the chaos produced in the physics community at the beginning of the 20th century by groundbreaking experimental findings and the theoretical speculations they engendered. It traces the slow and difficult birth of a ne
This highly readable work describes the history, meaning, and importance of quantum physics. It is written for a wide audience of both students and general readers who are interested in exploring the ideas and experiments that revolutionized the way scientists view the world. The book describes the
<span>Chaos control has become a fast-developing interdisciplinary research field in recent years. This book is for engineers and applied scientists who want to have a broad understanding of the emerging field of chaos control. It describes fundamental concepts, outlines representative techniques, p
<div><p>The tendency to synchronize may be the most mysterious and pervasive drive in all of nature. It has intrigued some of the most brilliant minds of the 20th century, including Albert Einstein, Richard Feynman, Norbert Wiener, Brian Josephson, and Arthur Winfree. </p> <p>At once elegant and r