Just Finished (re?)-Reading: Emergence – The Connected Lives of Ants, Brains, Cities and Software by Steven Johnson (FP: 2001) [234pp]
This is a possible re-read. I say ‘possible’ because I’m not entirely sure. I was moving a stack of books recently and came across another copy (a hardback this time) of this book that I have scant memory of. So, I either read it pre-Blog and essentially forgot about it or DNF’d it (again pre-Blog) and never actually finished it. Either way my re?-read didn’t produce any audible bells of recognition.
This is essentially about the (then new) science or idea of
Emergence – that what look on the surface as orderly processes from a global,
big-picture perspective are, at ground level, nothing of the sort. The classic
case is the ant hill where everything seems ordered, regimented, under control.
But looked at from the point of view of a single ant it’s nothing of the sort.
For one thing it’s impossible for any one ant to conceive of the whole nest. It’s
just too big, too complex and her brain (they’re all female of course apart
from the occasional requirement for male ants once a new queen is hatched for
simple impregnation) is just far too small and too simple to understand the
totality. The Queen, at the centre of things, doesn’t give out daily orders –
or indeed any orders – but spends her days laying eggs. The individual ants
rely on signals from other ants to determine how to behave. They follow pheromone
trails and count the number of other ants they encounter to decide if they’re
needed here or need to be elsewhere doing something else. Their total
instruction set is brief. But taken together, in their thousands, order emerges
out of chaos and the nest endures. Like ant nests and bee hives so cities,
brains and the (again at the time of publication) more advanced simulation
games like SimCity. Each example has a limited set of comparatively simple
rules and yet, when thousands (or millions) of actors use these rules – which individually
look and indeed are chaotic, uncontrolled by any central agency and undirected
for any overall purpose – a global order is spontaneously created and emerges
into focused existence.
5 comments:
i just know of it from a scifi pov... the galaxy has billions of stars, but no single planet, w/o astronomy, would know that they were whirling in a circle around their sun while bouncing up and down a bit and headed toward the edge of the universe similtaneously... oh, plus spinning at the same time; enough to make one giddy, haha... i forgot the solar system has a direction of its own, also... i should sit down now...
Ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooh. I love emergent order. First spotted it in nature, then in cities, then in markets. It's absolutely fascinating. If there's a General Rule behind emergent order it may the 'universe in a single equation' the physicists long to figure out. I need to re-read Matt Ridley's book on this.
@ Mudpuddle: Erm....... [grin]
@ Stephen: I was thinking of you when reading this - especially when he talked about Urban Design/Jane Jacobs, SimCity and Chimpanzee politics [grin]. Despite this being a little out of date I think you'd like it. You might also like 'Critical Mass - How One Thing Leads to Another by Philip Ball. Much about traffic patterns and urban transport in that one.
My favorite book about ants, so far, is Anthill by O Wilson, in which he embeds all kinds of ant data in a novel. I did not know there was a term for what I call "optimistic anarchy," my essential world view.
@ Judy: 'Optimistic Anarchy...' LOVE it! [lol] 'Anthill' is already on my "interest" list. I'll see about bumping it up the schedule. I'll also see about rooting out a more up to date book on the idea of Emergence for both you & Stephen. You might enjoy 'Critical Mass - How One Thing Leads to Another' by Philip Ball too if you're in to that sort of thing!
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