“Complexity sciences” are an interdisciplinary and transnational domain of study that aims at modeling natural and social “complex systems.” They appeared in the 1970s in Europe and the United States, but were boosted in the mid-1980s by the Santa Fe Institute (SFI) under the formula of “science of complexity.” This small but famous institution is the object of the present article. According to their promissory ambitions and to the enthusiastic claims of some scientific journalists, complexity sciences were going to revolutionize all of knowledge and even private and public actors who had learned to master them. In the light of this, one would expect to observe a well-established and autonomous research and educational field, capable of reproducing itself through professional institutions. Yet this is not the case. To explain the paradox, I propose to combine different models of history and sociology of emergent and declining domains, in order to give account of the rise and failure of complexity sciences.
...More
Article
Fabrizio Li Vigni;
(2022)
Hayek at the Santa Fe Institute: Origins, Models, and Organization of the Cradle of Complexity Sciences
(/isis/citation/CBB101266514/)
Article
Christophe Schinckus;
(2021)
The Santa Fe Institute and Econophysics: A Possible Genealogy?
(/isis/citation/CBB226941870/)
Thesis
Tasha L. Schoenstein;
(2022)
Computer Science on Campus: Technology, (Inter)Disciplinarity, and the Transformation of the American University
(/isis/citation/CBB839611150/)
Book
Henri Ellenberger;
Emmanuel Delille;
(2017)
Ethno-psychiatrie
(/isis/citation/CBB491409049/)
Article
Marina Gasnier;
(2019)
Réflexion épistémologique sur le patrimoine industriel: De la pluridisciplinarité à l’interdisciplinarité
(/isis/citation/CBB349917161/)
Article
Crowther-Heyck, Hunter;
(2006)
Herbert Simon and the GSIA: Building an Interdisciplinary Community
(/isis/citation/CBB000671318/)
Article
Erik Baker;
(2022)
The ultimate think tank: The rise of the Santa Fe Institute libertarian
(/isis/citation/CBB311000387/)
Article
Talia Dan-Cohen;
(September 2016)
Ignoring Complexity: Epistemic Wagers and Knowledge Practices among Synthetic Biologists
(/isis/citation/CBB599343715/)
Thesis
Lawson, Sean Trevor;
(2008)
Info[at]war.mil: Nonlinear Science and the Emergence of Information Age Warfare in the United States Military
(/isis/citation/CBB001560712/)
Article
M. Williams;
(2018)
The First Public Discussion of the Secret Colossus Project
(/isis/citation/CBB273811817/)
Book
Edgington, Ryan H.;
(2014)
Range Wars: The Environmental Contest for White Sands Missile Range
(/isis/citation/CBB001552222/)
Book
Masco, Joseph;
(2006)
The Nuclear Borderlands: The Manhattan Project in Post-Cold War New Mexico
(/isis/citation/CBB000741824/)
Article
Masco, Joseph;
(2004)
Nuclear technoaesthetics: Sensory politics from trinity to the virtual bomb in Los Alamos
(/isis/citation/CBB001180561/)
Article
Masco, Joseph;
(2004)
Mutant ecologies: Radioactive life in post-cold war New Mexico
(/isis/citation/CBB001180560/)
Thesis
Richter, Jennifer;
(2013)
New Mexico's Nuclear Enchantment: Local Politics, National Imperatives, and Radioactive Waste Disposal
(/isis/citation/CBB001567530/)
Article
Edgington, Ryan;
(2009)
The Safari of the Southwest: Hunting, Science, and the African Oryx on White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, 1969--2006
(/isis/citation/CBB001030811/)
Article
Frigg, Roman;
(2003)
Self-Organised Criticality--What It Is and What It Isn't
(/isis/citation/CBB000340894/)
Book
Nancy D. Campbell;
(2020)
OD: Naloxone and the Politics of Overdose
(/isis/citation/CBB601007525/)
Thesis
Edgington, Ryan H.;
(2008)
Lines in the Sand: An Environmental History of Cold War New Mexico
(/isis/citation/CBB001561166/)
Thesis
Zepcevski, Joline;
(2012)
Complexity and Verification: The History of Programming as Problem Solving
(/isis/citation/CBB001562789/)
Be the first to comment!