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Atlas of Social Complexity [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 508 pages, kõrgus x laius: 244x169 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Jun-2024
  • Kirjastus: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1789909511
  • ISBN-13: 9781789909517
  • Formaat: Hardback, 508 pages, kõrgus x laius: 244x169 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Jun-2024
  • Kirjastus: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1789909511
  • ISBN-13: 9781789909517
Embark on a riveting journey through the study of social complexity with The Atlas of Social Complexity. Over three decades of scientific exploration unfold, unravelling the enigmatic threads that compose the fabric of society. From the dance of bacteria, to human-machine interactions, to the ever-shifting dynamics of power in social networks, this Atlas maps the evolution of our understanding of social complexity.

Brian Castellanis and Lasse Gerrits Atlas is not merely retrospective. It is a compass pointing to uncharted territories: new directions for research and intellectual debate. With wit and insight, they invite the reader to ponder unanswered questions, taking them on a quest for alternative ways to understand the intricate complexities of societies.





The Atlas of Social Complexity is a thrilling expedition into the heart of what makes us human: from cognition, emotion, consciousness, the dynamics of human psychology, to social networks, collective behaviour, politics and governance, technology and planning, and the practice of social interventions. The Atlas also visits cross-cutting themes such as intersectionality, configurational complexity, and research methods.





Organised around six transdisciplinary themes and twenty-four topics the Atlas is an invaluable resource for all social science and complexity science scholars and students interested in new ideas and new ways of working in social complexity. It paves the way for the next generation of research in the study of social complexity.

Arvustused

Many have observed that in the social sciences, everything is connected to everything else but so far we have been singularly unsuccessful in attempting to explain the richness and diversity of this interconnected world. Glimpses of such explanations have come from the sciences of complexity but much of this reasoning has been contained within the traditional straitjacket of the physical sciences. What Castellani and Gerrits have done is to produce an Atlas of this world, through a series of maps that guide the reader to a great array of disciplines that can be informed by a multitude of ideas that they define as social complexity. This is a remarkable commentary on our progress in dealing with complex systems in all their guises and it is essential reading for everyone who seeks an understanding of our interconnected world. -- Michael Batty, University College London, UK 'This book is not just an invaluable Atlas to the extensive and fascinating literature on social complexity, but also an opinionated (in the best way) tour of the landscape, its heights and its depth and its quirks. The authors have read widely, thought carefully and explained clearly a broad sweep of research and practice on the idea of complexity and its application in the social, psychological and economic sciences. The book will be invaluable to academics, researchers, and policy analysts intrigued by how a social complexity approach might aid in the understanding of our complex world.' -- Nigel Gilbert, University of Surrey, UK An inspiring read for believers and non-believers. Whether or not you agree that complexity is what it is all about, this book formulates a great set of challenges to spark renewal in the interdisciplinary social sciences. Covering a wide terrain from cognition to ecology and intersectionality, it charts a set of adventurous routes through recent research to show how a sociologically informed complexity science can meaningfully address the questions that matter. -- Noortje Marres, University of Warwick, UK This is a superb review of the development of social complexity in the social sciences and is a must read for anyone interested in cutting-edge social theory. Castellani and Gerrits convincingly show that this set of concepts is being transformative of social science thinking across multiple disciplines, even if it is developing too slowly. -- Sylvia Walby, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK Castellani and Gerrits have done a considerable service in putting this Atlas together. It does social science and social scientists justice in seeing off the generally naïve and poorly informed efforts of many from the fields of mathematics and the physical sciences to apply their techniques in a social world which is both more dynamic and complex than the realms from which those techniques come. In an era of interwoven social and ecological crises, it puts human agency front and centre in engaging with social complexity to remind us that agency has causal power in shaping the future of complex systems. -- David Byrne, Durham University, UK This book stands as a formidable achievement, a true tour de force wherein the authors delve into our complex social world. They unravel the intricacies from the molecules comprising our cells to those shaping our bodies and ultimately forming us as conscious individuals. These individuals, in turn, have pioneered, discovered, and advanced technologies such as electronics, thinking robots, nuclear power, the contraceptive pill, and antibiotics. Collectively, they shape a complex society that, with an accelerating pace of change, achieved remarkable feats like landing a man on the Moon, eradicating smallpox, and establishing the World Wide Web. And, yes, also a society that kills its brothers and sisters and destroys its own natural environment much faster than it can reason about it. A profound sense of urgency emerges to comprehensively grasp these intricacies of our human society, considering its multifaceted interactions. Much like the Greek Titan, this Atlas bears the weight of the world and its remarkable inhabitants, and guided by the science of complexity offers new qualitative and quantitative avenues to make sense of this amazing world we live in.' -- Peter Sloot, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands In this thought-provoking collaboration, Castellani and Gerrits take us on an exciting journey beyond established boundaries to imagine what a new study of social complexity could look like. The Atlas challenges and inspires readers to make the intellectual and practical breakthroughs that are desperately needed in order to address the worlds most pressing problems. The breadth of the Atlas provides readers with an opportunity to explore new territories and does not shy away from concepts, such as power and inequality, that are often ignored in other complexity science books. My journey through the Atlas has left me feeling very hopeful about the future and motivated to explore even deeper into the unknown. -- Sharon Zivkovic, Community Capacity Builders, Centre for Autistic Social Entrepreneurship, Australia

Acknowledgments vii1 Theme 1: The Social Complexity Imagination 82 Origins of the Study of Social Complexity 233 Thirteen Situations 434 Cartography and Constructing the Atlas 635 Theme 2: Cognition, Emotion, and Consciousness 706 Autopoiesis and Cellular Cognition 777 Bacteria and the Brain 828 Immune System Cognition 889 Brain-based Cognition, Emotion and Consciousness 9910 The Self 12011 Human-machine 14012 Theme 3: dynamics of human psychology 14913 Human psychology as dynamical system 15714 Psychopathology of Mental Disorders 17315 Healing and the therapeutic process 19216 Mindfulness, imagination, and creativity 20517 Theme 4: living in global-ecological social systems 21618 Complex social Psychology 23219 Collective behaviour, social movements and mass psychology 24320 Configurational Social Science 26121 The local and the global: complexities of place 29722 Socio-technological life 32123 Governance, politics and technocracy 342vi The atlas of social complexity24 The challenges of applying complexity 35825 Economics in an unstable world 37226 Resilience and all that jazz 38427 Theme 5: charting a new methods territory 39628 Make love, not models 39829 Revisiting complex causality 40730 Mapping the new methodological terrain 42531 Getting philosophically real 45532 Theme 6: the unfinished space 464Appendix 1: list of respondents 486Appendix 2: speculative references 488
Brian Castellani, Professor and Director, Durham Research Methods Centre, Co-Director, Wolfson Research Institute for Health and Wellbeing, Durham University, UK, Visiting Professor in Humanities, Nelson Mandela University, South Africa and Adjunct Professor of Psychiatry, Northeastern Ohio Medical University, USA and Lasse Gerrits, Professor Governance of Complex Urban Transformations, Academic Director, Institute for Housing and Urban Development Studies, Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands