It is clear that computation is playing an increasingly prominent role
in the development of mathematics, as well as in the natural and social
sciences. The work of Stephen Wolfram over the last several decades has
been a salient part in this phenomenon helping founding the field of
Complex Systems, with many of his constructs and ideas incorporated in
his book A New Kind of Science (ANKS) becoming part of the scientific
discourse and general academic knowledge--from the now established
Elementary Cellular Automata to the unconventional concept of mining the
Computational Universe, from today's widespread Wolfram's Behavioural
Classification to his principles of Irreducibility and Computational
Equivalence.
This volume, with a Foreword by Gregory Chaitin and an Afterword by Cris
Calude, covers these and other topics related to or motivated by
Wolfram's seminal ideas, reporting on research undertaken in the decade
following the publication of Wolfram's NKS book. Featuring 39 authors,
its 23 contributions are organized into seven parts:
Mechanisms in Programs & Nature
Systems Based on Numbers & Simple Programs Social and Biological Systems
& Technology Fundamental Physics The Behavior of Systems & the Notion of
Computation Irreducibility & Computational Equivalence Reflections and
Philosophical Implications.