Principles of Quantitative Living Systems Science

Principles of Quantitative Living Systems Science by James R. Simms, published by Springer US on April 29, 2013, is a scholarly work comprising 280 pages in English. This book initiates a series aimed at rigorously articulating the biological and social sciences in a manner akin to the hard sciences, as predicted in the earlier publication, Living Systems. It explores the concept that living organisms, while more complex, share fundamental similarities with nonliving systems, a perspective rooted in the early 20th-century ideas of biologist Ludwig von Bertalanffy.
Readers will find a detailed examination of systems theory as it applies to life sciences, emphasizing the interconnectedness of living entities and their environments. The text discusses how systems are composed of interrelated parts, leading to emergent properties that transcend the individual components. This foundational approach not only addresses biological phenomena but also intersects with mathematics and library sciences, reflecting the interdisciplinary nature of the subject. The book serves as a significant contribution to the ongoing discourse in science, particularly in understanding living systems through a quantitative lens.
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In 1978, when the book Living Systems was published, it contained the prediction that the sciences that were concerned with the biological and social sciences would, in the future, be stated as rigorously as the “hard sciences” that study such nonliving phenomena as temperature, distance, and the interaction of chemical elements. Principles of Quantitative Living Systems Science, the first of a planned series of three books, begins an attempt to fulfill that prediction. The view that living things are similar to other parts of the physical world, differing only in their complexity, was explicitly stated in the early years of the twentieth century by the biologist Ludwig von Bertalanffy. His ideas could not be published until the end of the war in Europe in the 1940s. Von Bertalanffy was strongly opposed to vitalism, the theory current among biologists at the time that life could only be explained by recourse to a “vital principle” or God. He c- sidered living things to be a part of the natural order, “systems” like atoms and molecules and planetary systems. Systems were described as being made up of a number of interrelated and interdependent parts, but because of the interrelations, the total system became more than the sum of those parts. These ideas led to the development of systems movements, in both Europe and the United States, that included not only biologists but scientists in other fields as well. Systems societies were formed on both continents.
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