Complexity
Complexity
Complexity
Carlos Gershenson Instituto de Investigaciones en Matemticas Aplicadas y en Sistemas, Universidad Nacional Autnoma de Mxico A.P. 20-726, C.P. 01000 Mxico, D.F., Mxico [email protected] The term complexity derives etymologically from the Latin plexus, which means interwoven. Intuitively, this implies that something complex is composed by elements that are difficult to separate. This difficulty arises from the relevant interactions that take place between components. This lack of separability is at odds with the classical scientific methodwhich has been used since the times of Galileo, Newton, Descartes, and Laplaceand has also influenced philosophy and engineering. In recent decades, the scientific study of complexity and complex systems has proposed a paradigm shift in science and philosophy, proposing novel methods that take into account relevant interactions.
paradigm shift is required, and several novel proposals have been put forward in recent years.
Complexity Science?
The scientific study of complexity, under that label, started in the 1980s. Some people argue that it is a science in its infancy, since it has been only a few decades since its inception and it has yet to reveal its full potential. However, some people argue that complexity will never be a science itself, because of its pervasiveness. Since complexity can be described in every phenomenon, e.g. the amount of information to describe it, a science of complexity would be too broad to be useful. A third camp defends that complexity is already a science in its own right. This debate certainly depends on the notion of what a science is. Moreover, one can argue that all three viewpoints are correct to a certain degree. A scientific study of complex phenomena exists; this is not debated. People also agree that this study is offering new insights in all disciplines, and has a great potential, already yielding some fruits. The pervasiveness of complexity is also agreed upon. A scientific approach where interactions are considered, i.e. non-reductionist, has been propagating in all disciplines. Whether people call this approach complex or not, this is not relevant. The ideas and concepts of the scientific study of complex systems are 2
propagating. Perhaps there will never be a science of complexity itself, but complexity is pushing paradigm shifts in all sciences.