Evolutionary systems
Evolutionary systems are a type of system, which reproduce with mutation whereby the most fit elements survive, and the less fit die down.Rada, Roy. "Evolution and gradualness." BioSystems 14.2 (1981): 211-218.
One of the developers of the evolutionary systems thinking is Béla H. Bánáthy.
Laszlo, Alexander. "Evolutionary Systems Design." Journal of Organisational Transformation & Social Change 1.1 (2004): 29-46. Evolutionary systems are characterized by "moving equilibria and the dynamics of coevolutionary interactions which can not be foreseen ex ante."Rammel, Christian, and Jeroen CJM van den Bergh. "Evolutionary policies for sustainable development: adaptive flexibility and risk minimising." Ecological Economics 47.2 (2003): 121-133.
The study of evolutionary systems is an important subcategory of Complex Systems research.
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
Further reading
- Bentley, Peter, and David Corne. Creative evolutionary systems. Morgan Kaufmann, 2002.
- Csanyi, Vilmos. Evolutionary systems and society: a general theory. Durham, Duke University Press. (1989).
- Hommes, Carsien Harm. "Financial markets as nonlinear adaptive evolutionary systems." Tinbergen Institute Discussion Paper, No. 01-014/1 (2001)
- Rocha, Luis Mateus. "[http://informatics.indiana.edu/rocha/ises.html Selected self-organization and the semiotics of evolutionary systems] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151201033819/http://www.informatics.indiana.edu/rocha/ises.html |date=2015-12-01 }}." Evolutionary Systems: The Biological and Epistemological Perspectives on Selection and Self- Organization, . S. Salthe, G. Van de Vijver, and M. Delpos (eds.). Kluwer Academic Publishers, (1998) pp. 341–358.
{{systemstheory-stub}}