WEBThis is the Santa Fe Institute, a sort of Justice League of renegade geeks, where teams of scientists from disparate fields study the Big Questions.
WEBThe rise of complexity theory, an interdisciplinary field studying the emergent behavior and patterns of the interactions of simple (and not so simple) components, has been one of the most important responses to the ballooning of knowledge. — …
WEBWelcome to Santa Fe Institute. How has complexity science evolved from its 19th century roots? At the Santa Fe Institute, we're asking big questions
WEBWelcome to Santa Fe Institute. The Santa Fe Institute is leading the world in complexity science, with a mixed group of physicists, biologists, economists, political scientists, computer experts, and mathematicians working together.
WEBThe Santa Fe Institute was founded in 1984 by a group of scientists frustrated with the narrow disciplinary confines of academia. They wanted to tackle big questions that spanned different fields, and they felt the only way these questions could be posed and solved was through the intermingling of scientists of all kinds: physicists, biologists, economists, anthropologists, and many others.
WEBThe Santa Fe Institute was founded in 1984 by a man named George Cowan, with the help of Murray Gell-Mann who is a Nobel-prize physicist, Phil Anderson, another Nobel-prize physicist, Ken Arrow who won a Nobel prize in economics, and others. These guys all got together and decided to help found this ...
WEBWelcome to Santa Fe Institute. How could psychology benefit from a complexity-science approach? At the Santa Fe Institute, we're asking big questions.
WEBWelcome to Santa Fe Institute. How has complexity science evolved from its 19th century roots? At the Santa Fe Institute, we're asking big questions