This is a very interesting book. Or at least, it's a book about a cluster of very interesting topics, and occasionally contains interesting insights about these topics. The problem is that the book is a bit too modular - the chapters don't work very well together. Every author seems to have his own
Modularity: Understanding the Development and Evolution of Natural Complex Systems
β Scribed by Werner Callebaut, Diego Rasskin-Gutman
- Publisher
- The MIT Press
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 473
- Series
- Vienna Series in Theoretical Biology
- Edition
- illustrated edition
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Modularityβthe attempt to understand systems as integrations of partially independent and interacting unitsβis today a dominant theme in the life sciences, cognitive science, and computer science. The concept goes back at least implicitly to the Scientific (or Copernican) Revolution, and can be found behind later theories of phrenology, physiology, and genetics; moreover, art, engineering, and mathematics rely on modular design principles. This collection broadens the scientific discussion of modularity by bringing together experts from a variety of disciplines, including artificial life, cognitive science, economics, evolutionary computation, developmental and evolutionary biology, linguistics, mathematics, morphology, paleontology, physics, theoretical chemistry, philosophy, and the arts. The contributors debate and compare the uses of modularity, discussing the different disciplinary contexts of "modular thinking" in general (including hierarchical organization, near-decomposability, quasi-independence, and recursion) or of more specialized concepts (including character complex, gene family, encapsulation, and mosaic evolution); what modules are, why and how they develop and evolve, and the implication for the research agenda in the disciplines involved; and how to bring about useful cross-disciplinary knowledge transfer on the topic. The book includes a foreword by the late Herbert A. Simon addressing the role of near-decomposability in understanding complex systems.
β¦ Table of Contents
Series Foreword......Page 8
Foreword......Page 10
Preface......Page 16
I INTRODUCTION......Page 18
1 The Ubiquity of Modularity......Page 20
II EVO-DEVO: THE MAKING OF A MODULAR WORLD......Page 46
2 Natural Selection and the Origin of Modules......Page 50
3 Evolutionary Modules: Conceptual Analyses and Empirical Hypotheses......Page 68
4 Evolutionary Developmental Biology Meets Levels of Selection: Modular Integration or Competition, or Both?......Page 78
5 Modularity in Evolution: Some Low-Level Questions......Page 116
6 Evolutionary Lock-In and the Origin of Modularity in RNA Structure......Page 146
7 Amphibian Variations: The Role of Modules in Mosaic Evolution......Page 160
III EVO-PATTERNS:WORKING TOWARD A GRAMMAR OF FORMS......Page 198
8 The Remodularization of the Organism......Page 202
9 Modularity: Jumping Forms within Morphospace......Page 224
10 Morphological Modularity and Macroevolution: Conceptual and Empirical Aspects......Page 238
11 Hierarchical Integration of Modular Structures in the Evolution of Animal Skeletons......Page 256
12 Modularity in Art......Page 276
13 Modularity at the Boundary Between Art and Science......Page 300
IV MODULARITY OF MIND AND CULTURE......Page 322
14 Evolutionary Connectionism and Mind/Brain Modularity......Page 326
15 Modularity and Chunking......Page 348
16 Modularity of Cognitive Organization: Why It Is So Appealing and Why It Is Wrong......Page 370
17 Decomposability and Modularity of Economic Interactions......Page 400
18 The Natural Logic of Communicative Possibilities: Modularity and Presupposition......Page 426
Contributors......Page 452
Index......Page 454
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
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