Bigger than Chaos: Understanding Complexity through Probability

Bigger than Chaos: Understanding Complexity through Probability

by Michael Strevens
ISBN-10:
0674022599
ISBN-13:
9780674022591
Pub. Date:
09/30/2006
Publisher:
Harvard University Press
ISBN-10:
0674022599
ISBN-13:
9780674022591
Pub. Date:
09/30/2006
Publisher:
Harvard University Press
Bigger than Chaos: Understanding Complexity through Probability

Bigger than Chaos: Understanding Complexity through Probability

by Michael Strevens

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Overview

Many complex systems—from immensely complicated ecosystems to minute assemblages of molecules—surprise us with their simple behavior. Consider, for instance, the snowflake, in which a great number of water molecules arrange themselves in patterns with six-way symmetry. How is it that molecules moving seemingly at random become organized according to the simple, six-fold rule? How do the comings, goings, meetings, and eatings of individual animals add up to the simple dynamics of ecosystem populations? More generally, how does complex and seemingly capricious microbehavior generate stable, predictable macrobehavior?

In this book, Michael Strevens aims to explain how simplicity can coexist with, indeed be caused by, the tangled interconnections between a complex system’s many parts. At the center of Strevens’s explanation is the notion of probability and, more particularly, probabilistic independence. By examining the foundations of statistical reasoning about complex systems such as gases, ecosystems, and certain social systems, Strevens provides an understanding of how simplicity emerges from complexity. Along the way, he draws lessons concerning the low-level explanation of high-level phenomena and the basis for introducing probabilistic concepts into physical theory.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674022591
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 09/30/2006
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 432
Product dimensions: 5.69(w) x 8.94(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Michael Strevens is Professor of Philosophy at New York University. He received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2017.

Table of Contents

Note to the Reader

1. The Simple Behavior of Complex Systems

1.1 Simplicity in Complex Systems

1.2 Enion Probability Analysis

1.3 Towards an Understanding of Enion Probabilities

2. The Physics of Complex Probability

2.1 Complex Probability Quantified

2.2 Microconstant Probability

2.3 The Interpretation of IC-Variable Distributions

2.4 Probabilistic Networks

2.5 Standard IC-Variables

2.6 Complex Probability and Probabilistic Laws

2.7 Effective and Critical IC-Values

2.A The Method of Arbitrary Functions

2.B More on the Tossed Coin

2.C Proofs

3. The Independence of Complex Probabilities

3.1 Stochastic Independence and Selection Rules

3.2 Probabilities of Composite Events

3.3 Causal Independence

3.4 Microconstancy and Independence

3.5 The Probabilistic Patterns Explained

3.6 Causally Coupled Experiments

3.7 Chains of Linked IC-Values

3.A Conditional Probability

3.B Proofs

4. The Simple Behavior of Complex Systems Explained

4.1 Representing Complex Systems

4.2 Enion Probabilities and Their Experiments

4.3 The Structure of Microdynamics

4.4 Microconstancy and Independence of Enion Probabilities

4.5 Independence of Microdynamic Probabilities

4.6 Aggregation of Enion Probabilities

4.7 Grand Conditions for Simple Macrolevel Behavior

4.8 Statistical Physics

4.9 Population Ecology

5. Implications for the Philosophy of the Higher-Level Sciences

5.1 Reduction

5.2 Higher-Level Laws

5.3 Causal Relevance

5.4 The Social Sciences

5.5 The Mathematics of Complex Systems

5.6 Are There Simple Probabilities?

Notes

Glossary

References

Index

What People are Saying About This

This impressive book tackles an important question: how can systems of many interacting parts, which thus display low-level complexity, give rise to high-level simplicity? Said another way: how can very complicated and seemingly capricious micro-behavior generate stable, predictable macro-behavior? Complex systems of the sort Strevens deals with are all around us. Thermodynamics and ecology are just the beginning. He makes real progress on a genuinely difficult topic, one that is of central interest to science and to the philosophy of science. He also has a seemingly effortless command of his materials and a sure grip on the conceptual issues. The work is technically sophisticated--he knows his mathematics, probability theory and physics--and elegantly written. This is what good philosophy is all about.

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