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Coping with Uncertainty: The Self-Organisation of Social Systems

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Abstract

Nowadays, “self-organisation” is a broad term applied to a range of concepts that have one thing in common despite various names such as synergetics, autopoiesis, dissipative structures or self-referring systems: the attempt to describe and grasp the behaviour of complex, dynamic systems. In physics, for example, the concern is to explain structure-building processes in hydrodynamic convection flows or the coherent behaviour of light emissions in the laser. Chemistry studies the origins of spatial and/or temporal structures in chemical reactions. On the borders between chemistry and biology, scientists are studying the emergence and development of highly complex organic molecules and trying to understand how biological information emerged in a prebiotic world. From neurophysiology to ecology, biology is studying phenomena of ontogenesis and phylogenesis in order to grasp how the complex can emerge from the simple.

Translated by Jonathan Harrow.

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© 1999 Springer Science+Business Media New York

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Küppers, G. (1999). Coping with Uncertainty: The Self-Organisation of Social Systems. In: Cantoni, V., Di Gesù, V., Setti, A., Tegolo, D. (eds) Human and Machine Perception 2. Springer, Boston, MA. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-4809-6_7

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-4809-6_7

  • Publisher Name: Springer, Boston, MA

  • Print ISBN: 978-1-4613-7179-3

  • Online ISBN: 978-1-4615-4809-6

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