Archive for the ‘Chaos’ Category

Fashionable Nonsense

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

When mapping one science domain to another and borrowing terminology even metaphorically one rule to follow is to provide justification. This is very important otherwise people will laugh once they recognize that terminology was just thrown without any explanation or connection. For me this book was very important reading because I also mapped some computer science and engineering technology terminology to the domain of project management. However I provided some sort of justification to my relief.

Fashionable Nonsense: Postmodern Intellectuals’ Abuse of Science

- Dmitry Vostokov @ LiterateScientist.com -

Theory of Nothing

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

Just finished reading it. In summary: Everything is Nothing as their complexity measure is the same. Interesting short and small book to read if you have never heard of computationalism, many world interpretation of quantum mechanics, anthropic principle, self sampling assumption and quantum immortality. Discusses everything briefly and provides bibliography. However I think I should have read David Deutsch’s “The Fabric of Reality” book first which I bought recently and put on my reading list. The number of new concepts introduced was too overwhelming so I consider to read “Theory of Nothing” second time after finishing some other related books. 

Theory of Nothing

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- Dmitry Vostokov @ LiterateScientist.com -

Fooled by Randomness

Sunday, January 20th, 2008

This one finished reading yesterday. I don’t want to repeat my review you can find here:

Review of Fooled by Randomness: The Hidden Role of Chance in Life and in the Markets

Just want to add that I carried it in my pocket during flight that evening and perhaps avoided black swans. Knowledge-driven superstition…

- Dmitry Vostokov @ LiterateScientist.com -

The Nonlinear Universe: Chaos, Emergence, Life

Wednesday, January 2nd, 2008

After reading Rosen’s book “Life Itself” I became very interested in non-reductionist thinking and found the book from Alwyn C. Scott. It is an excellent overview and the last 30 page chapter “Reductionism in Life” is worth the whole book:

  • Newton’s Legacy
    • The Reductive Program
    • Supervenience and Physicalism
    • Practical Considerations
  • Objections to Reductionism
    • Googols of Possibilities
    • Convoluted Causality
    • Nonlinear Causality
    • Time’s Arrow
    • Downward Causation
    • Open Systems
    • Closed Causal Loops and Open Networks
  • Theories of Life
    • Artificial Life vs. Autopoiesis
    • Relational Biology
    • Mechanisms
    • Complex Systems and Chaotic Emergence
    • What Is Life?

The Nonlinear Universe: Chaos, Emergence, Life (The Frontiers Collection)

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Highly recommended especially if you were trained as a physicist or a chemist like myself.

- Dmitry Vostokov @ LiterateScientist.com -