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Chaos and Life: Complexity and Order in Evolution and Thought
 
 
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Chaos and Life: Complexity and Order in Evolution and Thought [Hardcover]

Richard J. Bird (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

023112662X 978-0231126625 November 19, 2003

Why, in a scientific age, do people routinely turn to astrologers, mediums, cultists, and every kind of irrational practitioner rather than to science to meet their spiritual needs? The answer, according to Richard J. Bird, is that science, especially biology, has embraced a view of life that renders meaningless the coincidences, serendipities, and other seemingly significant occurrences that fill people's everyday existence.

Evolutionary biology rests on the assumption that although events are fundamentally random, some are selected because they are better adapted than others to the surrounding world. This book proposes an alternative view of evolving complexity. Bird argues that randomness means not disorder but infinite order. Complexity arises not from many random events of natural selection (although these are not unimportant) but from the "playing out" of chaotic systems -- which are best described mathematically. When we properly understand the complex interplay of chaos and life, Bird contends, we will see that many events that appear random are actually the outcome of order.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

This thought-provoking work will be valuable reading for students and for professionals trained in ecology and evolution.... it should be required reading for advanced undergraduates, for graduate student seminars, and for discussion courses on the nature of organic evolution. Recommended [for] general readers, upper-level undergraduates and above.

(Choice vol. 11 # 4)

Bird reveals his philosophical, almost mystical, inclinations... Bird's book is a product of this creative imagination that grapples with the very process itself.

(Martin Lockley The Scientific and Medical Network 9/9/05)

Bird's explanation of how organisms tap the universe of archetypes is... radically ingenious.

(Times Literary Supplement vol. 12 no. 3)

Chaos and Life...literally challenges many of our accepted views of reality...it's extremely well-written, so that if readers are willing to make the effort, they can tread new paths of thought.

(Robin Robertson Cybernetics and Human Knowledge )

This is a formidable piece.

(Paul Johnson Richmond Times-Dispatch )

Well written and clear, makes a strong case.

(Northeastern Naturalist )

Review

Dick's explanations of chaos, stability - chaostability - life and love, climate and culture are usually rigorous, often romantic - and none the worse for that. They are thorough and clear, whether maths or handwaving, logic or Gaia. His emphasis on iteration, recursion and consequent emergence of new properties will explain Complexity thinking to many recruits, but his expositionof problems of organic evolution will upset orthodox biologists who think they understand it. I enjoyed having my cage bars rattled.

(Jack Cohen, co-author of The Collapse of Chaos, Figments of Reality, and Evolving the Alien )

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Columbia University Press (November 19, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 023112662X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0231126625
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,910,304 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing, May 15, 2008
By 
Ideophile "Idea Lover" (Colorado, United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Chaos and Life: Complexity and Order in Evolution and Thought (Hardcover)
The title "Chaos and Life" implies a model of how chaos is at the core of life. The core of life in this book, on the other hand, is a throwback model: the Turing machine. That's not to say that the topic of chaos is absent from this book - merely that it is not at its ultimate center.

Bird suggests that each living cell is a computer. I'll buy that. But then he goes on to suggest that since DNA resembles the symbol tape in a Turing machine that it in fact *is* the symbol tape in a cellular Turing machine. More than that, the symbols in DNA represent *numbers* and so addition, subtraction, multiplication, and so on, are taking place in each cell. RNA is used as registers in this model. I call this a throwback model in the sense of cognitive science, in which the Turing machine is the "classical" but largely discredited model of cognition, having subsequently been replaced in favor of connectionist and embodied dynamics models.

Is it unreasonable to argue that each living cell is a Turing machine carrying around its program in its DNA and storing data in its RNA? No. It's merely unexpected in a book that purports to be establishing a fundamental connection between chaos and life. Where is a proposal that the computation going on in each cell is a result of the complex network of non-linear interactions going on between the cell's genes, proteins, and environment? Where is a proposal that the computational states in each cell are a result of a series of leaps from strange attractor to strange attractor? Those are the kinds of ideas I would have expected to be at the heart of this book - unfortunately, at its core this book is more along the lines of "Turing Machines and Life".
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Thought-Provoking Book, October 24, 2005
By 
Roger J. Legare (San Diego, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Chaos and Life: Complexity and Order in Evolution and Thought (Hardcover)
Bird makes a strong case for the use of Chaos theory and Fractals to model life. But he sometimes goes too far and seems to ascribe more power to the mathematics than it actually has; he makes it sound mystical at times. On page 266, the paragraph starting with Chomsky is very profound but isolated and not developed in the remainder of the text. All in all, I recommend the book.
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1.0 out of 5 stars poor understanding of biology, August 12, 2008
This review is from: Chaos and Life: Complexity and Order in Evolution and Thought (Hardcover)
The author of this book might be an expert on chaos, but he clearly has no formal training in biology. This book is full of mistakes that imply a poor understanding of the current state of biological research, or a deliberate misrepresentation of that research. For example Bird denigrates the contribution of molecular biology by suggesting that the chemistry of life isn't actually biology (it is), and that molecules can't be connected to the formation of organisms (they can and have been). Furthur, Bird argues that natural selection can't explain diversity because it would take too long for chance to create a protein, dna molecule, or cell. However Bird misunderstands the theory when he implies that life came about by chance. While chance may produce variation, it is selection that preserves good variants and eliminates bad. Selection IS the organizing principle that Bird calls out for.

Additionally, there are clear logical errors in the arguments in the text (e.g. argument through false analogy, appeal to authority, begging the question, etc...). The author should have consulted with one or more practicing researchers before sending this to press.

There are also factual errors, and incorrect citations (e.g. Bates, not Bateson, proposed the theory of mimicry).

This book is a typical autodidact's "theory of everything" and you will be disappointed if you expect better.

For those who want to learn about chaos theory, fractals, and how they might tie in to biology, Wolfram's "A new kind of science" is much more compelling.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
"and the next, I will call that simple repetition. To qualify as iteration a process must have two further steps." Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
unary arithmetic, computing mechanism, dendritic form, stochastic resonance, correlation dimension, precursor species, biological computer
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Maxwell's Demon, Big Bang, Alan Turing
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