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41 results for "complexity" — page 1 of 3
M_5_22 — Mesolithic Europe: Hunter-Gatherer Complexity Before Agriculture
The Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age, ~10,000–5000 BCE in Europe) — the period between the end of the last Ice Age and the arrival of farming — has been traditionally treated as a brief, uninteresting interlude between the d
K_5_15 — Neural Fractals & the Edge of Chaos: Brain Criticality and Complexity
The brain is poised at a critical point between order and chaos — and its fractality is not an accident but a functional necessity. In 2003, John Beggs and Dietmar Plenz published one of neuroscience's landmark papers: t
ZC_2_18 — Societal Collapse — Tainter's Complexity Theory
Joseph Tainter's The Collapse of Complex Societies (1988) proposed one of the most influential theoretical frameworks for understanding why civilizations fail: societies collapse when the marginal returns on increasing c
G_3_11 — Information Theory and Biological Complexity
Information theory, founded by Claude Shannon (1948, A Mathematical Theory of Communication), provides a rigorous mathematical framework for quantifying information content, communication capacity, and complexity — conce
G_3_16 — Complexity Theory and Civilizational Collapse
Complexity theory — drawn from physics, mathematics, ecology, and information theory — provides a powerful framework for understanding why civilizations collapse: not as the result of a single catastrophic event, but as
G_2_04 — Complexity Economics and Ancient Trade Systems
Complexity economics — the application of complex systems theory, non-linear dynamics, and agent-based modeling to economic phenomena — provides a powerful modern framework for understanding ancient and premodern trade s
ZD_1_13 — Kolmogorov Complexity and Algorithmic Information Theory
Kolmogorov complexity (also called algorithmic complexity, descriptive complexity, or program-size complexity) — the length of the shortest computer program (on a fixed universal Turing machine) that produces a given str
ZD_5_18 — Complexity Science: The Santa Fe Institute and the Science of Emergence
Complexity science — the interdisciplinary study of systems composed of many interacting components whose collective behavior cannot be predicted from individual parts — emerged as a distinct field in the 1980s, catalyze
ZD_4_10 — Complexity Theory in Biology — Kauffman, Wolfram, Edge of Chaos
The application of complexity theory to biology — the study of how complex, adaptive, self-organizing structures and behaviors emerge in living systems from the interactions of simpler components — has been one of the mo
G_3_06 — Systems Collapse and Complexity Theory Applied to Civilizations
This document examines Systems Collapse and Complexity Theory Applied to Civilizations, a topic within the Modern Frameworks research area. Key areas of investigation include Tainter's Foundational Thesis, The Western Ro
ZD_1_05 — Computational Complexity: P vs NP and the Limits of Efficient Computation
Computational complexity theory classifies problems not by whether they can be solved, but by how efficiently they can be solved — and its central open question, P vs NP, is one of the seven Clay Millennium Prize Problem
W_5_24 — Civilization Collapse & Systems Fragility
Civilizational collapse — the rapid, significant decline of a complex society's political, economic, and social institutions — is a recurring pattern in human history. Major examples include the Western Roman Empire (476
G_4_22 — Emergence and Self-Organization: From Physics to Biology
Emergence — the appearance of macroscopic properties that are not reducible to the behavior of individual components — is one of the most important and contested concepts in modern science and philosophy. From Bénard con
G_3_13 — Self-Organization from Atoms to Civilizations
Self-organization is the process by which ordered, complex structures emerge spontaneously from simpler components without centralized control or external direction — driven by local interactions among parts that collect
G_2_13 — Fractal Analysis of Ancient Structures and Settlements
Fractal analysis applies the mathematics of self-similar, scale-invariant geometry — developed by Benoît Mandelbrot (The Fractal Geometry of Nature, 1982) — to the study of ancient architectures, settlement patterns, and
X_4_18 — Fractal Physiology: The Mathematics of Healthy Life
The body is a fractal machine. From capillaries that branch like river deltas to the 70 m² of lung surface packed into a 4-litre chest cavity, and from the beat-to-beat complexity of a healthy heart to the trabecular sca
INTERDOC_67 — Consciousness as Substrate-Independent Coherence Across Biological, Acoustic, and Artificial Domains
Three independent research streams are converging on the same conclusion:
W_2_27 — Jōmon Civilization: Japan's 14,000-Year Pre-Agricultural Complex Society
The Jōmon culture of Japan (~14,000–300 BCE) represents one of the most extraordinary challenges to conventional models of human development. [KEY FINDING] Jōmon people produced the world's oldest known pottery (radiocar
K_3_06 — Disorders of Consciousness: Coma, Vegetative State, and Minimal Consciousness
Disorders of consciousness (DoC) — coma, vegetative state (now termed unresponsive wakefulness syndrome/UWS), and minimally conscious state (MCS) — represent some of the most challenging clinical and philosophical proble
K_1_17 — Integrated Information Theory: Phi, Axioms & Empirical Tests
Integrated Information Theory (IIT), developed primarily by Giulio Tononi (University of Wisconsin–Madison) from 2004 to the present, proposes that consciousness is identical to integrated information — a quantity denote
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