My Account | Home| Bulletin Board| Cart | Help
Close Session
IISER-KIndian Institute of Science Education & Research - Kolkata
Quick Search
Search Terms:
All Documents
Books
Newspapers
Periodicals
Articles
Theses
E-Books
Database : IISERK

Set Session Filters
Login to ask the library to add a book.
Active Filter Settings
No Active Filters
There are 0 titles in your cart.

Search History
Recommended Reading
first record | previous record | next record | last record
full | marc
Record 1 of 1
  Total Requests  0      Unsatisfied Requests  0
You searched IISERK - Title: [Widescreen].
Request
Call Number 621
Author Ball, Philip. author.
Title Why Society is a Complex Matter [electronic resource] : Meeting Twenty-first Century Challenges with a New Kind of Science / by Philip Ball.
Material Info. 80p. 35 illus. in color. online resource.
Summary Note Society is complicated. But this book argues that this does not place it beyond the reach of a science that can help to explain and perhaps even to predict social behaviour. As a system made up of many interacting agents – people, groups, institutions and governments, as well as physical and technological structures such as roads and computer networks – society can be regarded as a complex system. In recent years, scientists have made great progress in understanding how such complex systems operate, ranging from animal populations to earthquakes and weather. These systems show behaviours that cannot be predicted or intuited by focusing on the individual components, but which emerge spontaneously as a consequence of their interactions: they are said to be ‘self-organized’. Attempts to direct or manage such emergent properties generally reveal that ‘top-down’ approaches, which try to dictate a particular outcome, are ineffectual, and that what is needed instead is a ‘bottom-up’ approach that aims to guide self-organization towards desirable states. This book shows how some of these ideas from the science of complexity can be applied to the study and management of social phenomena, including traffic flow, economic markets, opinion formation and the growth and structure of cities. Building on these successes, the book argues that the complex-systems view of the social sciences has now matured sufficiently for it to be possible, desirable and perhaps essential to attempt a grander objective: to integrate these efforts into a unified scheme for studying, understanding and ultimately predicting what happens in the world we have made. Such a scheme would require the mobilization and collaboration of many different research communities, and would allow society and its interactions with the physical environment to be explored through realistic models and large-scale data collection and analysis. It should enable us to find new and effective solutions to major global problems such as conflict, disease, financial instability, environmental despoliation and poverty, while avoiding unintended policy consequences. It could give us the foresight to anticipate and ameliorate crises, and to begin tackling some of the most intractable problems of the twenty-first century.
Notes Society: a Complex Problem --   On the Road: Predicting traffic --  Every Move You Make: Patterns of crowd movement -- Making Your Mind Up: Norms and decisions --   Broken Windows: The spread and control of crime -- The Social Web: Networks and their failures.-   Spreading It Around: Mobility, disease and epidemics -- After the Crash: Economic and financial systems --   Love Thy Neighbour: How to foster cooperation -- Living Cities: Urban development as a complex system -- The Transformation of War: Modelling modern conflict -- Towards a Living Earth Simulator: The FuturICT Project.
ISBN 9783642290008
Subject Physics.
Subject Social sciences Data processing.
Subject Engineering.
Subject Economics.
Subject Social sciences Methodology.
Subject Physics.
Subject Socio- and Econophysics, Population and Evolutionary Models.
Subject Methodology of the Social Sciences.
Subject Complexity.
Subject Computer Appl. in Social and Behavioral Sciences.
Subject Economic Systems.
Subject Communication Studies.
Added Entry SpringerLink (Online service)
Date Year, Month, Day:01405141
Link Online book

Keyword Search

 Words: Search Type:
 
 

Database: IISERK

Any filter options that are chosen below will be combined with the Session Filters and applied to the search.
Nature of Contents Filters Format Filters

Including Excluding

Including Excluding
Language Filters Place of Publication Filters

Including Excluding

Including Excluding
Publication Date Context Date
  -     -  

Set Session Filters
Select below to return to the last:
Copyright © 2014 VTLS Inc. All rights reserved.
VTLS.com