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Complexity, Volume 1
Volume 1, Number 1, September / October 1995
- Harold J. Morowitz:
The emergence of complexity. 4-5
- John L. Casti:
Bell curves and monkey languages: When do empirical relations become a law of nature?. 12-15
- Murray Gell-Mann:
What is complexity? Remarks on simplicity and complexity by the Nobel Prize-winning author of The Quark and the Jaguar. 16-19 - W. Brian Arthur:
Complexity in economic and financial markets: Behind the physical institutions and technologies of the marketplace lie the beliefs and expectations of real human beings. 20-25
- Gregory J. Chaitin:
The Berry paradox. 26-30 - Melanie Mitchell:
Genetic algorithms: An overview. 31-39
- Karl Sigmund:
Darwin's "circles of complexity": Assembling ecological communities. 40-44
- Randall Tagg:
A field guide to chaos. 45-46 - Harvey Shepard:
Why the world is simple. 46-48 - Alexander Scheeline, Yeou-Teh Liu:
Chaos limited. 48
- Shuguang Zhang, Martin Egli:
A proposed complementary pairing mode between single-stranded nucleic acids and β-stranded peptides: A possible pathway for generating complex biological molecules. 49-56 - Aviv Bergman, Sarah P. Otto, Marcus W. Feldman:
On the evolution of recombination in haploids and diploids: I. Deterministic models. 57-67
Volume 1, Number 2, November / December 1995
- John L. Casti:
Complexity and simplicity, in the eye of the beholder. 2-3
- Harold J. Morowitz:
The simplicity odyssey: The simplest genome may be the place to begin looking at complex phenomena. 7-8
- David A. Lane:
Models and aphorisms: Making sense of our worlds of experience. 9-13 - E. Atlee Jackson:
No provable limits to "scientific knowledge": There's more to scientific "understanding" than logical reasoning. 14-17
- Lee A. Segel:
Grappling with complexity: Problems in physics and biology yield general principles for understanding complex systems. 18-25
- Stuart A. Kauffman, William G. Macready:
Technological evolution and adaptive organizations: Ideas from biology may find applications in economics. 26-43
- E. Atlee Jackson:
Great expectations. 44-46 - Joseph D. Bryngelson:
Provocative questions, problematic answers. 46-47 - Benjamin Luce:
Power-packed dynamical systems software. 47-48 - Alexander Scheeline, Nicholas Weber:
Send in the clones. 48
- Aviv Bergman, Sarah P. Otto, Marcus W. Feldman:
On the evolution of recombination in haploids and diploids: II. Stochastic models. 49-57 - Randall Morck, Harold J. Morowitz:
Value and information: A profit maximizing strategy for Maxwell's demon. 58-63
- Wojciech H. Zurek:
The many faces of information. 64
Volume 1, Number 3, January / February 1995
- Harold J. Morowitz:
Classified complexity. 2
- John L. Casti:
If d'Arcy had only had a computer: How computers have changed the face of science. 5-8
- George A. Cowan:
The emergence of the Santa Fe Institute: A complex, adaptive system: In 1984, a group of scientists embarked on a bold new approach to science. 9-13 - Harald Atmanspacher, Gerda Wiedenmann, Anton Amann:
Descartes revisited: The endo-exo-distinction and its relevance for the study of complex systems. 15-21
- Jeffrey Johnson:
A language of structure in the science of complexity. 22-29
- Burton Voorhees:
Gödel's theorem and the possibility of thinking machines: "Do androids dream of electric sheep?". 30-34
- Blake LeBaron:
Confusion and misinformation on financial chaos. 35-37 - Steven Durlauf:
Remembrance of things past. 37-38 - Terry Jones:
In praise of simplicity. 39
- Newton C. A. da Costa, Francisco A. Doria:
Gödel incompleteness, explicit expressions for complete arithmetic degrees and applications. 40-55 - Octavio Miramontes:
Order-disorder transitions in the behavior of ant societies. 56-60
Volume 1, Number 4, March / April 1996
- Harold J. Morowitz:
What's in a name?: One place to look for "complexity" is in the dictionary. 7-8
- Murray Gell-Mann:
Nature conformable to herself: Some arguments for a unified theory of the universe. 9-12
- Ricard V. Solé, Susanna C. Manrubia, Bartolo Luque, Jordi Delgado, Jordi Bascompte:
Phase transitions and complex systems: Simple, nonlinear models capture complex systems at the edge of chaos. 13-26
- Stephen Lucci, Izidor Gertner:
Getting started in mathematics. 27-28
- Bernard Testa, Lemont B. Kier:
Complex systems in drug research: I. The chemical levels. 29-36 - Lemont B. Kier, Bernard Testa:
Complex systems in drug research: II. The ligand - active site - water confluence as a complex system. 37-42 - Karl Svozil:
How real are virtual realities, how virtual is reality? - Constructive re-interpretation of physical undecidability. 43-54 - Gregory J. Chaitin:
A new version of algorithmic information theory. 55-59
Volume 1, Number 5, May / June 1996
- Murray Gell-Mann:
Complexity at large. 3-5
- John L. Casti:
Seeing the light at El Farol: A look at the most important problem in complex systems theory. 7-10
- Brian C. Goodwin:
Emergent form: Evolving beyond darwinism: Understanding diversity requires dynamic theories of development and behavior. 11-15
- Howard Gutowitz:
Cellular automata and the sciences of complexity (part I): A review of some outstanding problems in the theory of cellular automata. 16-22
- Anastasios A. Tsonis:
Dynamical systems as models for physical processes. 23-33
- Vince Darley:
Learning to live on the edge. 34 - George Johnson:
Romancing the brain. 35-36 - Daniel W. McShea:
A post-modern vision of artificial life. 36-38 - James Kakalios:
Fractals: More than just a pretty picture. 38-39
- William G. Macready, David H. Wolpert:
What makes an optimization problem hard? 40-46 - Cristian Calude, Cezar Câmpeanu:
Are binary codings universal? 47-50 - Herbert Dawid, Alexander Mehlmann:
Genetic learning in strategic form games. 51-59
Volume 1, Number 6, July / August 1996
- Harold J. Morowitz:
Why complexity theory? Charting the future of medical modeling. 7-8
- Daniel C. Dennett:
Hofstadter's quest: A tale of cognitive pursuit. 9-12
- Jeffrey Johnson, Phil D. Picton:
How to train a neural network: An introduction to the new computational paradigm. 13-28
- Howard Gutowitz:
Cellular automata and the sciences of complexity (part II). 29-35
- Tom Kepler:
In the eye of the beholder. 36-37 - Harold J. Morowitz:
Back to the future. 37-38 - Gavan Lintern:
Complexity stimulates theories of cognition and action. 38-39
- Ricard V. Solé:
On macroevolution, extinctions and critical phenomena. 40-44
- Roland Somogyi, Carol Sniegoski:
Modeling the complexity of genetic networks: Understanding multigenic and pleiotropic regulation. 45-63
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