Out of Control : The New Biology of Machines, Social Systems, & the Economic World

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Out of Control
: The New Biology of Machines, Social Systems, & the Economic World

作者:KevinKelly

出版社:BasicBooks

副标题:TheNewBiologyofMachines,SocialSystems,&theEconomicWorld

出版年:1995-4-14

页数:528

定价:USD22.95

装帧:Paperback

丛书:BasicBooks

ISBN:9780201483406

内容简介
······

Out of Control is a summary of what we know about self-sustaining systems, both living ones such as a tropical wetland, or an artificial one, such as a computer simulation of our planet. The last chapter of the book, "The Nine Laws of God," is a distillation of the nine common principles that all life-like systems share. The major themes of the book are:

As we make our machines and institutions more complex, we have to make them more biological in order to manage them.

The most potent force in technology will be artificial evolution. We are already evolving software and drugs instead of engineering them.

Organic life is the ultimate technology, and all technology will improve towards biology.

The main thing computers are good for is creating little worlds so that we can try out the Great Questions. Online communities let us ask the question "what is a democracy; what do you need for it?" by trying to wire a democracy up, and re-wire it if it doesn't work. Virtual reality lets us ask "what is reality?" by trying to synthesize it. And computers give us room to ask "what is life?" by providing a universe in which to create computer viruses and artificial creatures of increasing complexity. Philosophers sitting in academies used to ask the Great Questions; now they are asked by experimentalists creating worlds.

As we shape technology, it shapes us. We are connecting everything to everything, and so our entire culture is migrating to a "network culture" and a new network economics.

In order to harvest the power of organic machines, we have to instill in them guidelines and self-governance, and relinquish some of our total control.

作者简介
······

Kevin Kelly is Senior Maverick at Wired magazine. He co-founded Wired in 1993, and served as its Executive Editor from its inception until 1999. He has just completed a book for Viking/Penguin publishers called "What Technology Wants," due out in the Fall 2010. He is also editor and publisher of the Cool Tools website, which gets half a million unique visitors per month. From 1984-1990 Kelly was publisher and editor of the Whole Earth Review, a journal of unorthodox technical news. He co-founded the ongoing Hackers' Conference, and was involved with the launch of the WELL, a pioneering online service started in 1985. He authored the best-selling New Rules for the New Economy and the classic book on decentralized emergent systems, Out of Control.

目录
······

Chapter 1: THE MADE AND THE BORN

Neo-biological civilization

The triumph of the bio-logic

Learning to surrender our creations

Chapter 2: HIVE MIND

Bees do it: distributed governance

The collective intelligence of a mob

Asymmetrical invisible hands

Decentralized remembering as an act of perception

More is more than more, it's different

Advantages and disadvantages of swarms

The network is the icon of the 21st century

Chapter 3: MACHINES WITH AN ATTITUDE

Entertaining machines with bodies

Fast, cheap and out of control

Getting smart from dumb things

The virtues of nested hierarchies

Using the real world to communicate

No intelligence without bodies

Mind/body black patch psychosis

Chapter 4: ASSEMBLING COMPLEXITY

Biology: the future of machines

Restoring a prairie with fire and oozy seeds

Random paths to a stable ecosystem

How to do everything at once

The Humpty Dumpty challenge

Chapter 5: COEVOLUTION

What color is a chameleon on a mirror?

The unreasonable point of life

Poised in the persistent state of almost falling

Rocks are slow life

Cooperation without friendship or foresight

Chapter 6: THE NATURAL FLUX

Equilibrium is death

What came first, stability or diversity?

Ecosystems: between a superorganism and an identity workshop

The origins of variation

Life immortal, ineradicable

Negentropy

The fourth discontinuity: the circle of becoming

Chapter 7: EMERGENCE OF CONTROL

In ancient Greece the first artificial self

Maturing of mechanical selfhood

The toilet: archetype of tautology

Self-causing agencies

Chapter 8: CLOSED SYSTEMS

Bottled life, sealed with clasp

Mail-order Gaia

Man breathes into algae, algae breathes into man

The very big ecotechnic terrarium

An experiment in sustained chaos

Another synthetic ecosystem, like California

Chapter 9: POP GOES THE BIOSPHERE

Co-pilots of the 100 million dollar glass ark

Migrating to urban weed

The deployment of intentional seasons

A cyclotron for the life sciences

The ultimate technology

Chapter 10: INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY

Pervasive round-the-clock plug in

Invisible intelligence

Bad-dog rooms vs. nice-dog rooms

Programming a commonwealth

Closed-loop manufacturing

Technologies of adaptation

Chapter 11: NETWORK ECONOMICS

Having your everything amputated

Instead of crunching, connecting

Factories of information

Your job: managing error

Connecting everything to everything

Chapter 12: E-MONEY

Crypto-anarchy: encryption always wins

The fax effect and the law of increasing returns

Superdistribution

Anything holding an electric charge w ill hold a fiscal charge

Peer-to-peer finance with nanobucks

Fear of underwire economies

Chapter 13: GOD GAMES

Electronic godhood

Theories with an interface

A god descends into his polygonal creation

The transmission of simulacra

Memorex warfare

Seamless distributed armies

A 10,000 piece hyperreality

The consensual ascii superorganism

Letting go to win

Chapter 14: IN THE LIBRARY OF FORM

An outing to the universal library

The space of all possible pictures

Travels in biomorph land

Harnessing the mutator

Sex in the library

Breeding art masterpieces in three easy steps

Tunnelling through randomness

Chapter 15: ARTIFICIAL EVOLUTION

Tom Ray's electric-powered evolution machine

What you can't engineer, evolution can

Mindless acts performed in parallel

Computational arms race

Taming wild evolution

Stupid scientists evolving smart molecules

Death is the best teacher

The algorithmic genius of ants

The end of engineering's hegemony

Chapter 16: THE FUTURE OF CONTROL

Cartoon physics in toy worlds

Birthing a synthespian

Robots without hard bodies

The agents of ethnological architecture

Imposing destiny upon free will

Mickey Mouse rebooted after clobbering Donald

Searching for co-control

Chapter 17: AN OPEN UNIVERSE

To enlarge the space of being

Primitives of visual possibilities

How to program happy accidents

All survive by hacking the rules

The handy-dandy tool of evolution

Hang-gliding into the game of life

Life verbs

Homesteading hyperlife territory

Chapter 18: THE STRUCTURE OF ORGANIZED CHANGE

The revolution of daily evolution

Bypassing the central dogma

The difference, if any, between learning and evololution

The evolution of evolution

The explanation of everything

Chapter 19: POSTDARWINISM

The incompleteness of Darwinian theory

Natural selection is not enough

Intersecting lines on the tree of life

The premise of non-random mutations

Even monsters follow rules

When the abstract is embodied

The essential clustering of life

DNA can't code for everything

An uncertain density of biological search space

Mathematics of natural selection

Chapter 20: THE BUTTERFLY SLEEPS

Order for free

Net math: a counter-intuitive style of math

Lap games, jets, and auto-catalytic sets

A question worth asking

Self-tuning vivisystems

Chapter 21: RISING FLOW

A 4 billion year ponzi scheme

What evolution wants

Seven trends of hyper-evolution

Coyote trickster self-evolver

Chapter 22: PREDICTION MACHINERY

Brains that catch baseballs

The flip side of chaos

Positive myopia

Making a fortune from the pockets of predictability

Operation Internal Look, Ahead

Varieties of prediction

Change in the service of non-change

Telling the future is what the systems are for

The many problems with global models

We are all steering

Chapter 23: WHOLES, HOLES, AND SPACES

What ever happened to cybernetics?

The holes in the web of scientific knowledge

To be astonished by the trivial

Hypertext: the end of authority

A new thinking space

Chapter 24: THE NINE LAWS OF GOD

How to make something from nothing

Hijacking the universe

ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY

A to L

M to Z

评论 ······

无语:我的小脑瓜装不了这么多东西

很爽的一本科学幻想小说,涨见识;早两年看就更好了,不过现在也不晚

innobook上好像有中文试读版的,不过好像就前面几章

跳着读的。除了有点罗嗦(描述占绝大部分),其它各方面都好。读开头的时候疑惑这不就是混沌理论嘛,可他怎么只字不提呢,读到后面,老头子说这是反混沌……想想也对,混沌理论反着说。可还是一家亲。当然那么长一本书,涉及到的内容和观点不止这个了。

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