To kick off our discussions of Formalisms In Complexity, I thought  
I'd add this to the mix.

     -- Owen

Owen Densmore
http://backspaces.net - http://redfish.com - http://friam.org

------------------------------------------------------------------

The Six Desert Island Books On Complexity (In no particular order)

This list began after several conversations on FRIAM about formalism,  
and its lack, in Complexity.  These prompted me to see just what  
*was* available.  These books all cover part of our Science with  
sufficient formalism.  I've not read all of any of them, they are  
more like references for me, but they are focused on areas important  
to be rigorous about within our Science, if it is to be one.

1 - Bar-Yam: Dynamics of Complex Systems
     http://tinyurl.com/qumgf
I put this first because it stands in for a Complexity Textbook.   
Surprisingly, there are no such texts that I've been able to find.   
Bar-Yam does a great job of looking at the areas deemed complex in  
the early 1990's when the book was written.

2 - Newman, Barabasi, Watts: The Structure and Dynamics of Networks
     http://tinyurl.com/jh3u8
This is "the next best thing" to a textbook, a series of readings,  
with a good introduction, in an area within complexity.  There are  
others books of readings, the SFI redbooks, for example.  This is  
particularly of interest to us due to the fast rise of graph theory  
within modeling.

3 - MacKay: Information Theory, Inference, and Learning Algorithms
     http://www.inference.phy.cam.ac.uk/mackay/
     http://tinyurl.com/e5len
Robert Holmes led us to this delightful book when he led a couple of  
WedTech meetings on the Monte Carlo techniques (Ch 29).  This book is  
not only exceptional for its breadth, but also for its author putting  
the entire book online for free use!  He also includes software  
examples using open source tools and actively maintains errata on his  
website.

4 - Gintis: Game Theory Evolving
     http://tinyurl.com/ew3yr
Many of us use Agent Based Modeling for investigating problems.  The  
agents have behavior and evolve in time.  This book is a bit wacky in  
its approach, disdaining dogmatic and classical approaches, in order  
to focus on the import of evolution within game theory.  Its kinda  
fun too.

5 - Strogatz: Nonlinear Dynamics and Chaos: With Applications
     to Physics, Biology, Chemistry and Engineering
     http://tinyurl.com/e8ldl
Strogatz may be the best teacher of technically difficult material in  
the world!  He's won important prizes in this area.  This is a great  
book for physicists who've always wondered why their profs gently led  
them around the great gaping holes in their art.

6 - Devaney: An Introduction to Chaotic Dynamical Systems
     http://tinyurl.com/z3l8r
Our sister science, Chaos, has made exquisite headway in formalizing  
a difficult area.  Were we so lucky!  I have Chaos envy!  There are  
several books out there, but this is the most cited I think.  I'd  
also consider Davies, Exploring Chaos, for his short treatment and  
inclusion of really excellent Java applets, and Williams, Chaos  
Theory Tamed, for its very pragmatic, approachable and broad coverage.



On Jul 31, 2006, at 11:23 AM, Owen Densmore wrote:

> As you have likely noticed, we've had a few conversations on FRIAM
> discussing formalisms in complexity:
>    [FRIAM] Definition of Complexity
>    [FRIAM] Dynamics of Complex Systems by Yaneer Bar-Yam
>    [FRIAM] Lyapunov Exponent
>    [FRIAM] What have the Romans - sorry - complexity done for us?
>
> You are invited to come chat about all this in person at the WedTech
> meeting this Wed, Aug 2.
>
> Due to schedule madness, we'll meet at 1:30, later than usual.  We'll
> not need the conference room, so we'll meet at Tesoro so we can lunch
> while chatting.  Best to get there a bit earlier so you can order
> lunch/greet before we start.
>
> Feel free to think of an issue or stance taken in the email exchanges
> and expand upon the theme.  Or come with something new!  Devil's
> advocates welcome!
>
> Examples taken from the various emails:
> - Hubler's and Gell-Mann's Definitions.
> - Thermal Dynamic or Statistical Mechanic formalisms.
> - Dissipative Structures, Gradients and Work.
> - Few Textbooks covering the field.
> - What headway has been made in the last 10 years?
> - Define Self Organization and/or Emergence.
> - Measures: Reynolds number, Correlation Length, etc.
> - What's the rush -- its emerging itself!
> - It's not a science but an approach.
> - This is silly and you are all chasing your tails!
>
>      -- Owen
>
> Owen Densmore
> http://backspaces.net - http://redfish.com - http://friam.org
>
>
>
> ============================================================
> FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
> Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
> lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


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