Most of us are intuitively familiar with small social systems, such as
families and soccer teams. Surprisingly, though, most of us are
unaware of how complex these systems are or of the fact that they have
a unique character distinguishing them from both populations and
individuals. The current manuscript, which emerged from high-level
scientific publications on the subject, aims to bridge this gap in our
understanding of small social systems. The book aims to explain,
illustrate, and model the unique and fascinating nature of small
(social) systems by relying on deep scientific foundations and by
using examples from sport, movies, music, and the martial arts. To
support its friendly exposition of challenging scientific ideas, the
book also discusses entertaining questions such as (1) why inviting
your mother-in-law to dinner might be a challenging event, for reasons
you have never considered; (2) why soccer teams should be messy in
order to win; (3) why Nazis are deeply wrong in their understanding of
the importance of entropy; and (4) why “panda fighters” failed in
the UFC (Ultimate Fighting Championship). "How Small Systems Work is a
welcome book, which sheds light on a branch of mathematics overlooked
by scholars: how networks store information. Focusing on small
systems, the book asks fundamental questions, providing the tools (and
the examples) for answering them –with fun. Neuman analyses, with
plenty of humor, the dynamics of a family of cats, the pleasure of
listening to jazz, and the science behind football championships,
while uncovering hidden gems in the history of cinema” Dr. Mario
Alemi, author of “The Amazing Journey of Reason: from DNA to
Artificial Intelligence”
Les mer
From Soccer Teams to Jazz Trios and Families
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783030822385
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Springer Nature
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter