An Autonomous Agent

exploring the noosphere

Category: complexity theory (Page 4 of 8)

Geoffrey West Videos

I’ll be attending a talk by Geoffrey West soon. Many of his ideas are great additions to the work of Stuart Kauffman, Ricard Sole, and others at the Santa Fe Institute.

List of talks and lectures by Geoffrey West:

On Metabolism and Scaling Laws

Geoffrey West: The surprising math of cities and corporations

Geoffrey West On Complexity

Scaling Laws In Biology And Other Complex Systems

Urban Friction

YouTube Playlist

self-reference

self-reference is a really cool tumblr page. I would call some of the images on the site computer art. There are some fascinating images:

Human Collective Intelligence

The collective intelligence of humans is remarkable. We all share 99% of genes, yet when you look at the vast majority of the population at any given instant, the amount of ignorance and differing knowledge is stunning. Look at the achievements of humans. But, given a single individual who is deemed to be the “most intelligent” of the population, you will not find in him the majority of which is required to construct and maintain of the structures humans have built.  The smartest one will only be an expert in a specific field of knowledge. Their contributions include discovering the Theory of Relativity, proving the incompleteness of logical systems (Godel’s Theorem) or writing rules for Calculus and other such concepts we now have in our library of knowledge.
This reliance on the collective is very interesting; especially considering the United States is built upon  the concept of individual freedom. So, I suggest you compare the collective societies, where the individual has his freedom secondary to the state. In these populations, you don’t have the same level of massive collective intelligence as in Capitalist societies. Instead, these societies tend to have a population which share a single monotonous intelligence. It seems paradoxical to have such a collective strength emerge out of a multitude of distinct autonomous units and a lack of such strength when these units are more uniform in their actions. But is it precisely this power of individual freedom and expression which leads to the formation of reliance on collective interactions.

Neighbourhoods as Organs; Cities as Brains

Just an idea to dwell about for future writings:
The similarity of human neighbourhoods to the organization of organ tissue; skyscraper and city organization to brain and neurons. For example, cities do not directly manipulate the physical landscape to produce its sustenance. Instead a city relies on the outer towns and provinces to provide food for its inhabitants. The city provides the organization for the efficient production and distribution of the food and goods. This is exactly as the brain functions: providing the organization and decisions for the efficient production and consumption of food. It’s as if a massive organism is forming on Earth.
These signs provide clues to the development of complex structures. Still further complexity lies in understanding the curious fact that financial crashes are preceded by a rapid increase in skyscraper construction. Skyscrapers are a complex structure, newly introduced in the universe; so their construction, almost exclusively reliant on financial booms or bubbles is curious.

Stuart Kauffman Videos

Stuart Kauffman provides many insights into nature, evolution, and other subjects in the following videos:

YouTube Playlist

Stuart Kauffman – Beyond Belief 2007

The Re-Enchantment of Humanity: Dr. Stuart Kauffman

Stuart Kauffman on Beyond Reductionism

Reinventing the Sacred with Stuart Kauffman part1

Stuart Kauffman: Yuk ‘n’ Yum

Stuart Kauffman Returns to Gund 1/2

Stuart Kauffman – Mind in the Poised Realm

Biologist and complexity theorist Stuart Kauffman on preadaptations in evolution

Page 4 of 8

Become a Friend of GNOME [ GNU Link] kde-user

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén