Selforganization in complex systems : the past, present, and future of synergetics : proceedings of the international symposium, Hanse Institute of Advanced Studies, Delmenhorst, Germany, November 13-16, 2012

Author(s)

    • Pelster, Axel
    • Wunner, Günter
    • Hanse-Wissenschaftskolleg Delmenhorst

Bibliographic Information

Selforganization in complex systems : the past, present, and future of synergetics : proceedings of the international symposium, Hanse Institute of Advanced Studies, Delmenhorst, Germany, November 13-16, 2012

Axel Pelster, Günter Wunner, editors

(Understanding complex systems / founding editor, J.A. Scott Kelso)(Springer complexity)

Springer, c2016

Other Title

Self-organization in complex systems : the past, present, and future of synergetics

Available at  / 1 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This proceedings volume contains talks and poster presentations from the International Symposium "Self-Organization in Complex Systems: The Past, Present, and Future of Synergetics", which took place at Hanse-Wissenschaftskolleg, an Institute of Advanced Studies, in Delmenhorst, Germany, during the period November 13 - 16, 2012. The Symposium was organized in honour of Hermann Haken, who celebrated his 85th birthday in 2012. With his fundamental theory of Synergetics he had laid the mathematical-physical basis for describing and analyzing self-organization processes in a diversity of fields of research. The quest for common and universal principles of self-organization in complex systems was clearly covered by the wide range of interdisciplinary topics reported during the Symposium. These extended from complexity in classical systems and quantum systems over self-organisation in neuroscience even to the physics of finance. Moreover, by combining a historical view with a present status report the Symposium conveyed an impression of the allure and potency of this branch of research as well as its applicability in the future.

Table of Contents

Complexity in Classical Systems.- Complexity in Quantum Systems.- Self-Organisation in Neuroscience.- History.- Poster Contributions.- Appendix.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-2 of 2

Details

Page Top