Showing posts with label complex systems. Show all posts
Showing posts with label complex systems. Show all posts

Thursday, February 8, 2024

Are cities and companies biological structures?

Geoffrey West

The book Scale: The universal laws of life and death in organisms, cities and companies, by Geoffrey West, from the Santa Fe Institute, which I discussed in the previous post, asserts that cities and companies are subject to laws very similar to those that apply to living beings. They are general laws, applicable to all entities of these types, regardless of their origin. West explains it this way:

Remarkably, analyses of such data show that, as a function of population size, city infrastructure—such as the length of roads, electrical cables, water pipes, and the number of gas stations—scales in the same way whether in the United States, China, Japan, Europe, or Latin America. As in biology, these quantities scale sublinearly with size, indicating a systematic economy of scale but with an exponent of about 0.85 rather than 0.75...[F]ewer roads and electrical cables are needed per capita the bigger the city. Like organisms, cities are indeed approximately scaled versions of one another, despite their different histories, geographies, and cultures, at least as far as their physical infrastructure is concerned.

Thursday, October 1, 2020

A Singular Universe

Javier Sánchez Cañizares is one of the contributors to the book Preguntas sobre Ciencia y Fe, published in 2014 and republished this year. In 2020, Javier has published a book in Spanish with the same title as this post, which can be considered as a book on philosophy of science at a high level of popularization. The goal of the book is to show that materialistic reductionism has no chance of providing a correct complete explanation, as our universe is singular because of several different reasons: