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Synergetics may be considered as an interdisciplinary effort
dealing with the gene ral problem of how science can cope with
complex systems. The preceding symposia on synergetics were devoted
to systems of physics, chemistry and partly also biolo gy and
sociology. It was possible to develop adequate concepts to describe
and even to calculate evolving macroscopic spatial, temporal, and
functional structures which emerge through self-organization of the
individual parts of the systems under con sideration. This book
contains the invited papers presented at the Symposium on the
Synerge tics of the brain, Schloss Elmau, Bavaria, May 2 to 7,
1983. The inclusion of this topic in the synergetics enterprise
represents a big step towards a treatment of complex systems. Most
probably the human brain is the most complex system we know of. As
the organizers believe, this symposium provides the reader with a
good cross section of experimental results and theoretical
approaches to cope with the complex problems of structure and
function of the brain. It was generally felt that such a joint
meeting between experimentalists and theoreticians is of great
importance for future development of this field. Modern
experimental methods, e. g. multielectrode derivations allow or
will allow us, in short, to collect huge amounts of data. Simi
larly high-speed computers will flood us with an enormous number of
outputs once the basic model equations have been chosen."
The first journalist to herald the New Economy of the 1990s now
predicts a stunning, sharp downturn: why it will happen, when it's
coming, and what will happen afterward. The economist most renowned
for predicting the New Economy of the 1990s now returns - just as
books like The Long Boom and Dow 36,000 are turning the idea of
perpetual prosperity into conventional wisdom - to say that the
dominating economic event of the next few years is likely to be a
deep recession, perhaps even a depression. Michael J. Mandel begins
The Coming Internet Depression by explaining why just such a
depression is not only possible but increasingly likely. His
explanation is based in a comparison of the present period with the
1920s: both saw tremendous growth in GDP that was largely centered
on the hypergrowth of a single industry - automobiles in the 1920s,
information technology today. When this hypergrowth reverts to a
normal growth pattern, as the automobile industry did in 1929, the
resulting overcapacity will slow down the entire economy.
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