Aktivitet: Udgivelse af peer-review og redaktionelt arbejde - typer › Peer reviewer/fagfællebedømmer af manuskripter › Forskning
Beskrivelse
Complexity and dynamical depth
We argue that a critical difference distinguishing machines from
organisms and computers from brains is not complexity in a structural sense
but a difference in dynamical organization, that is not well accounted for by
current complexity measures. We propose a measure of the complexity of a
system that is largely orthogonal to computational, information theoretic, or
thermodynamic conceptions of structural complexity. What we call a system’s
dynamical depth is a separate dimension of system complexity that measures
the degree to which it exhibits discrete levels of nonlinear dynamical
organization in which successive levels are distinguished by local entropy
reduction and constraint generation. A system with greater dynamical depth
than another consists in a greater number of such nested dynamical levels.
Thus a mechanical or linear thermodynamic system has less dynamical depth
than an inorganic self-organized system, which has less dynamical depth than
a living system. Including an assessment of dynamical depth can provide a
more precise and systematic account of the fundamental difference between
inorganic systems (low dynamical depth) and living systems (high dynamical
depth), irrespective of the number of their parts and the causal relations
between them.