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9780471123088: Would-Be Worlds: How Simulation Is Changing the Frontiers of Science
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Book by Casti John

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Critical acclaim for John Casti′s previous book

"Five Golden Rules is caviar for the inquiring reader. Anyone who enjoyed solving math problems in high school will be able to follow the author′s explanations, even if high school was a long time ago. There is joy here in watching the unfolding of these intricate and beautiful techniques. Casti′s gift is to be able to let the nonmathematical reader share in his understanding of the beauty of a good theory." Christian Science Monitor

"[Five Golden Rules] ranges into exotic fields such as game theory (which played a role in the Cuban Missile Crisis) and topology (which explains how to turn a doughnut into a coffee cup, or vice versa). If you′d like to have fun while giving your brain a first–class workout, then check this book out." San Francisco Examiner

"Unlike many popularizations, [this book] is more than a tour d′horizon: it has the power to change the way you think. Merely knowing about the existence of some of these golden rules may spark new, interesting maybe even revolutionary ideas in your mind. And what more could you ask from a book?" New Scientist

"This book has meat! It is solid fare, food for thought . . . makes math less forbidding, and much more interesting." Ben Bova, The Hartford Courant

"This book turns math into beauty." Colorado Daily

"John Casti is one of the great science writers of the 1990s." San Francisco Examiner

In the ever–changing world of science, new instruments often lead to momentous discoveries that dramatically transform our understanding. Today, with the aid of a bold new instrument, scientists are embarking on a scientific revolution as profound as that inspired by Galileo′s telescope. Out of the bits and bytes of computer memory, researchers are fashioning silicon surrogates of the real world elaborate "artificial worlds" that allow them to perform experiments that are too impractical, too costly, or, in some cases, too dangerous to do "in the flesh."

From simulated tests of new drugs to models of the birth of planetary systems and galaxies to computerized petri dishes growing digital life forms, these laboratories of the future are the essential tools of a controversial new scientific method. This new method is founded not on direct observation and experiment but on the mapping of the universe from real space into cyberspace. There is a whole new science happening here the science of simulation.

The most exciting territory being mapped by artificial worlds is the exotic new frontier of "complex, adaptive systems." These systems involve living "agents" that continuously change their behavior in ways that make prediction and measurement by the old rules of science impossible from environmental ecosystems to the system of a marketplace economy. Their exploration represents the horizon for discovery in the twenty–first century, and simulated worlds are charting the course.

In Would–Be Worlds, acclaimed author John Casti takes readers on a fascinating excursion through a number of remarkable silicon microworlds and shows us how they are being used to formulate important new theories and to solve a host of practical problems. We visit Tierra, a "computerized terrarium" in which artificial life forms known as biomorphs grow and mutate, revealing new insights into natural selection and evolution. We play a game of Balance of Power, a simulation of the complex forces shaping geopolitics. And we take a drive through TRANSIMS, a model of the city of Albuquerque, New Mexico, to discover the root causes of events like traffic jams and accidents.

Along the way, Casti probes the answers to a host of profound questions these "would–be worlds" raise about the new science of simulation. If we can create worlds inside our computers at will, how real can we say they are? Will they unlock the most intractable secrets of our universe? Or will they reveal instead only the laws of an alternate reality? How "real" do these models need to be? And how real can they be? The answers to these questions are likely to change the face of scientific research forever.

Présentation de l'éditeur :
"As we approach a new century, modelling through new mathematical insights and powerful computers grows apace. John Casti has written a truly important book." The Sunday Times (London).

"As a popular account of the enormous change computers have brought to the everyday practice of science, it is an easy and enjoyable read." Nature.

"Would–Be Worlds gives a spectacular view of this new intellectual landscape." New Scientist

Acclaimed popular science writer John Casti takes us on a fascinating romp through the remarkable simulated worlds being fashioned from the bits and bytes of computers. A new generation of technological marvels now enables scientists to recreate lifelike computer models to better everything from traffic patterns and the stock market to weather systems and the working of human brains.

JOHN L. CASTI, PhD, (Santa Fe, New Mexico) is a resident researcher at the Santa Fe Institute and a professor at the Institute for Economics, Operations Research, and System Theory at the Technical University of Vienna. He is the author of Searching for Certainty, Paradigms Lost, Complexification and Five Golden Rules (Wiley).

Les informations fournies dans la section « A propos du livre » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.

  • ÉditeurJohn Wiley & Sons Inc
  • Date d'édition1996
  • ISBN 10 0471123080
  • ISBN 13 9780471123088
  • ReliureRelié
  • Nombre de pages256
  • Evaluation vendeur
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9780471196938: Would-Be Worlds: How Simulation Is Changing the Frontiers of Science

Edition présentée

ISBN 10 :  0471196932 ISBN 13 :  9780471196938
Editeur : John Wiley & Sons Inc, 1998
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  • 9780788196768: Would-Be Worlds: How Simulation Is Changing the Frontiers of Science

    Diane ..., 1997
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Would-Be Worlds: How Simulation is Changing the Frontiers of Science Casti, John
Edité par Wiley (1996)
ISBN 10 : 0471123080 ISBN 13 : 9780471123088
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Casti, John
Edité par Wiley (1996)
ISBN 10 : 0471123080 ISBN 13 : 9780471123088
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