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Reframing Complexity - Perspectives from the North and South (Paperback)
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Reframing Complexity - Perspectives from the North and South (Paperback)
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Havana's Instituto de Filosofia's First Biennial International
Seminar on the Philosophical, Epistemological and Methodological
Implications of Complexity Theory, was held in January 2002 in
Havana, Cuba's capital city. The seminar was aimed at familiarizing
Cuban researchers and professors in a more direct way with some of
the current trends - and widespread scope - of the expanding field
of complexity thinking, affording them the possibility of personal
contacts with some of the people engaged in that effort. The
seminar was attended by specialists from fifteen countries, ranging
from Chile to Australia along the West-East axis, and from Norway
to South Africa along the North-South one. There were participants
from developed and underdeveloped countries. This book contains
selected papers from the 'Complexity 2002' seminar, edited by
Fritjof Capra (author of 'The Tao of Physics', 'The Web of Life: A
New Scientific Understanding of Living Systems' and 'The Hidden
Connections: A Science for Sustainable Living'), Alicia Juarrero
(author of 'Dynamics in Action'), Pedro Sotolong, and Jacco van
Uden (author of 'Complexity and Organization'). The papers have
been organized in four parts: I. Sources of Complexity: Science and
Information; II. Philosophical, Epistemological and Methodological
implications; III. Organizational Implications; IV. Global and
Ethical Implications. The papers in Part I can be said to approach
the phenomenon of complexity at a very basic level. Here the issues
being addressed revolve around the very fundamental question of why
the complexity sciences are so important: What are the most
fundamental lessons to be learned from studying complex systems?
Papers included in Part II engage in a broader, philosophical
investigation of some of the most general ontological,
epistemological and methodological implications of the complexity
approach, showing how very old questions are currently being
reformulated and/or reinterpreted in the light of complexity
thinking. Papers that appear in Part III address various important
issues about the links between complexity and social,
organizational, business and management questions. Finally, Papers
in Part IV return once again to more global implications of
Complexity thinking, this time dealing with Ethical and
Globalization issues of contemporary world.
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