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The Garden in the Machine : The Emerging Science of Artificial Life

Emmeche, ClausSampson, Steven(Translated by)
Part of the Princeton science library series
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In this wide-ranging survey, Claus Emmeche outlines many of the challenges and controversies involved in the dynamic and curious science of artificial life.

He describes the work being done by an international network of biologists, computer scientists and physicists who are using computers to study life as it could be, or as it might evolve under conditions different from those on Earth.

Many artificial-life researchers believe that they can create new life in the computer by simulating the processes observed in traditional, biological life-forms.

The flight of a flock of birds, for example, can be reproduced faithfully and in all its complexity by a relatively simple computer program that is designed to generate electronic "boids".

Are these "boids" then alive? The central problem, Emmeche notes, lies in defining the salient differences between biological life and computer simulations of its processes.

His study touches on every aspect of this complex and rapidly developing discipline, including its connections to artificial intelligence, chaos theory, computational theory, and studies of emergence.

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Product Details
Princeton University Press
0691033307 / 9780691033303
Hardback
570.1
25/07/1994
United States
216 pages, 1 halftone 25 figs.
127 x 203 mm, 369 grams
General (US: Trade)/Undergraduate Learn More