理念
Complexity 豆瓣
作者: Mitchell M. Waldrop 出版社: Simon & Schuster 1992 - 1
In a rented convent in Santa Fe, a revolution has been brewing. The activists are not anarchists, but rather Nobel Laureates in physics and economics such as Murray Gell-Mann and Kenneth Arrow, and pony-tailed graduate students, mathematicians, and computer scientists down from Los Alamos. They've formed an iconoclastic think tank called the Santa Fe Institute, and their radical idea is to create a new science called complexity. These mavericks from academe share a deep impatience with the kind of linear, reductionist thinking that has dominated science since the time of Newton. Instead, they are gathering novel ideas about interconnectedness, coevolution, chaos, structure, and order - and they're forging them into an entirely new, unified way of thinking about nature, human social behavior, life, and the universe itself. They want to know how a primordial soup of simple molecules managed to turn itself into the first living cell - and what the origin of life some four billion years ago can tell us about the process of technological innovation today. They want to know why ancient ecosystems often remained stable for millions of years, only to vanish in a geological instant - and what such events have to do with the sudden collapse of Soviet communism in the late 1980s. They want to know why the economy can behave in unpredictable ways that economists can't explain - and how the random process of Darwinian natural selection managed to produce such wonderfully intricate structures as the eye and the kidney. Above all, they want to know how the universe manages to bring forth complex structures such as galaxies, stars, planets, bacteria, plants, animals, and brains. There are commonthreads in all of these queries, and these Santa Fe scientists seek to understand them. Complexity is their story: the messy, funny, human story of how science really happens. Here is the tale of Brian Arthur, the Belfast-born economist who stubbornly pushed his theories of economic ch
数学与哲学 豆瓣
作者: 张景中 出版社: 大连理工大学出版社 2008
本书分11章探讨了数学与哲学上的许多问题。如,变与不变,数与量,相同与不同,事物变化的连续性等等,既阐述了数学与哲学这两大学科各自的特点,又从多方面论述了哲学研究与数学研究的密不可分性;以生动的实例说明了哲学家是如此重视数学,而数学又始终在影响着哲学。在研究了古代和当代的主要哲学家和数学诸流派的各种观点之后,作者讲述了自己的许多独到的见解。最后一章,“数学与哲学随想”,是作者多年来研究的心得与体会。
一 “万物皆数”观点的破灭与再生
——第一次数学危机与实数理论
1.1 毕达哥拉斯学派的信条——万物皆数
1.2 第一个无理数
1.3 无理数之谜
1.4 连续性的奥秘
1.5 戴德金分割
1.6 连续归纳原理
1.7 “万物皆数”的再生
二 哪种几何才是真的
——非欧几何与现代数学的“公理”
2.1 欧几里得的公理方法
2.2 欧几里得的几何定理是真理吗
2.3 非欧几何的发现
2.4 哪一个是真的
2.5 公理是什么
三 变量无穷小量的鬼魂
——第二次数学危机与极限概念
四 自然数有多少
——数学中的“实在无穷”概念
五 罗素悖论引起的轩然大波
——第三次数学危机
六 数是什么
——对数学对象本质的几种看法
七 是真的,但又不能证明
——哥德尔定理
八 数学与结构——布尔巴基学派的观点
九 命运决定还是意志自由
——必然性与偶然性的数学思考
十 举例子能证明几何定理吗
——演绎与归纳的对立与统一
十一 数学与哲学随想
……