The new science of complexity

Deterministic chaos, and even maximum computational complexity, have been discovered within Newtonian dynamics. Economists assume that prices and price changes can also obey abstract mathematical laws of motion. Sociologists and other postmodernists advertise that physics and chemistry have outgrown...

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Main Author: Joseph L. McCauley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 1997-01-01
Series:Discrete Dynamics in Nature and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/S1026022697000046
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spelling doaj-aec5281b9f35424f940428c5e9e85a542020-11-25T01:09:33ZengHindawi LimitedDiscrete Dynamics in Nature and Society1026-02261607-887X1997-01-0111173010.1155/S1026022697000046The new science of complexityJoseph L. McCauley0Physics Department, University of Houston, Houston 77204, TX, USADeterministic chaos, and even maximum computational complexity, have been discovered within Newtonian dynamics. Economists assume that prices and price changes can also obey abstract mathematical laws of motion. Sociologists and other postmodernists advertise that physics and chemistry have outgrown their former limitations, that chaos and complexity provide new holistic paradigms for science, and that the boundaries between the hard and the soft sciences, once impenetrable, have disappeared like the Berlin Wall. Three hundred years after the deaths of Galileo, Descartes, and Kepler, and the birth of Newton, reductionism appears to be on the decline, with holistic approaches to science on the upswing. We therefore examine the evidence that dynamical laws of motion may be discovered from empirical studies of chaotic or complex phenomena, and also review the foundation of reductionism in invariance principles.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/S1026022697000046ComplexitySimulationsLaws of natureInvariance principles Socio-economic sciences.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joseph L. McCauley
spellingShingle Joseph L. McCauley
The new science of complexity
Discrete Dynamics in Nature and Society
Complexity
Simulations
Laws of nature
Invariance principles
Socio-economic sciences.
author_facet Joseph L. McCauley
author_sort Joseph L. McCauley
title The new science of complexity
title_short The new science of complexity
title_full The new science of complexity
title_fullStr The new science of complexity
title_full_unstemmed The new science of complexity
title_sort new science of complexity
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Discrete Dynamics in Nature and Society
issn 1026-0226
1607-887X
publishDate 1997-01-01
description Deterministic chaos, and even maximum computational complexity, have been discovered within Newtonian dynamics. Economists assume that prices and price changes can also obey abstract mathematical laws of motion. Sociologists and other postmodernists advertise that physics and chemistry have outgrown their former limitations, that chaos and complexity provide new holistic paradigms for science, and that the boundaries between the hard and the soft sciences, once impenetrable, have disappeared like the Berlin Wall. Three hundred years after the deaths of Galileo, Descartes, and Kepler, and the birth of Newton, reductionism appears to be on the decline, with holistic approaches to science on the upswing. We therefore examine the evidence that dynamical laws of motion may be discovered from empirical studies of chaotic or complex phenomena, and also review the foundation of reductionism in invariance principles.
topic Complexity
Simulations
Laws of nature
Invariance principles
Socio-economic sciences.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/S1026022697000046
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