Continued from a post of August 20, 2015 —
The death link above leads to an obituary for one
"John Henry Holland, Who Computerized Evolution."
A book by Holland published July 13, 2012, by The MIT Press —
Signals and Boundaries
Building Blocks for Complex Adaptive Systems
By John H. Holland
Overview
Complex adaptive systems (cas), including ecosystems, governments, biological cells, and markets, are characterized by intricate hierarchical arrangements of boundaries and signals. In ecosystems, for example, niches act as semi-permeable boundaries, and smells and visual patterns serve as signals; governments have departmental hierarchies with memoranda acting as signals; and so it is with other cas. Despite a wealth of data and descriptions concerning different cas, there remain many unanswered questions about "steering" these systems. In Signals and Boundaries, John Holland argues that understanding the origin of the intricate signal/border hierarchies of these systems is the key to answering such questions. He develops an overarching framework for comparing and steering cas through the mechanisms that generate their signal/boundary hierarchies.
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How nice to have an overarching framework.