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The Moment of Complexity: Emerging Network Culture
 
 
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The Moment of Complexity: Emerging Network Culture [Hardcover]

Mark C Taylor
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 342 pages
  • Publisher: University of Chicago Press (7 Jan 2002)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0226791173
  • ISBN-13: 978-0226791173
  • Product Dimensions: 23.9 x 15.7 x 2.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,456,766 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Mark C. Taylor
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Product Description

Product Description

We live in a moment of unprecedented complexity, an era in which change occurs faster than our ability to comprehend it. With "The Moment of Complexity", Mark C. Taylor offers a map for the unfamiliar terrain opening in our midst, unfolding an original philosophy of our time through a remarkable synthesis of science and culture. According to Taylor, complexity is not just a breakthrough scientific concept but the defining quality of the post-Cold War era. The flux of digital currents swirling around us, he argues, has created a new network culture with its own distinctive logic and dynamic. Drawing on resources from information theory and evolutionary biology, Taylor explains the operation of complex adaptive systems in natural, social and cultural processes. To appreciate the significance of emerging network culture, he claims, it is necessary not only to understand contemporary scientific and technological transformations, but also to explore the subtle influences of art, architecture, philosophy, religion and education. "The Moment of Complexity" is a remarkable work of cultural analysis on a scale rarely seen today. To follow its trajectory is to learn how we arrived at this critical moment in our culture, and to know where we might head in the 21st century.

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
I'm an armchair science reader; I'm not an expert on art, philosophy, science, biology, information systems, cultural studies, etc. but have a healthy top-level interest in the lot of them so far as they relate to the big questions. The beauty of this book is that it takes plastic polymaths like myself and scatter-guns their curiosity with a lot of little intellectual gems. I suppose somewhere inside I'm grasping for the grand metanarrative that links the whole darn life thing together. And, I'm pleased to report, so too does Mark C Taylor. His holy grail? The complex adaptive system.

For those of you interested in complexity theory, have a read. The complex adaptive system is apparently (almost) all-pervading. It is not just about ant colonies and sandpiles, but the real reason behind evolution, consciousness, meaning, societal systems, culture and some other stuff that I can't rightly recall. And, what's more, its becoming positively ubiquitous in our 21st Century digital information society. We are defined by networks within webs within networks within webs.

So, is the argument compelling? I think your average logical positivist would claim that the metanarrative died out with the onset of the cold hard logic of the empricists. Of course Mr Taylor knows this and litters his book with the evidence, but, I dunno, its a pretty tough challenge; and, frankly, using the architecture of Frank Gehry and the art of Chuck Close (where their work has got to be derivative) and drawing analogies with Hegel and Kierkegaard seems a little much.

I think Mr Taylor would have been better served reining in some of lofty ambitions for complex adaptive systems, and tempered his language a bit so that he would appear just a little more critical. However there is no doubt that this is a fascinating little read.
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Amazon.com:  7 reviews
66 of 72 people found the following review helpful
Theory of Everything 7 May 2002
By Steev Hise - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Mark C. Taylor is among those very rare writers and thinkers who are able to take many disparate disciplines of knowledge and perform a synthesis which creates wisdom. With "The Moment of Complexity" he does this and more. The book is not a technical treatise on a specific field, not a presentation of new scientific findings; it's not even one of those futurist manifestos that all those former Wired Magazine journalists churn out so frequently. Rather, "Complexity" is what I would call a "theory of everything" book.

With this book it's evident that Taylor has been thinking about certain heady concepts for at least all of his adult life. Indeed, I've also read an earlier work of his, "Hiding," that touches on some of the same ideas. But with Complexity he has honed his thinking and added even more contributing topics, all zeroing in to our current turbulent moment of history.

It's difficult to describe briefly what this theory of everything entails, as you might expect with most theories of everything. Taylor's is personal and professional, and it's been developing since the 1960s. It includes a sometimes dizzying array of topics and references to other thinkers, including artificial life, chaos theory, information theory, evolution, semiotics, cultural studies, Derrida, Foucault, Baudrillard, Kant, Hegel, Marx, Lamarck, the history of the modern university, cybernetics, emergent phenomena, fashion, intellectual property... and more!

Taylor somehow manages to weave a coherent and compelling tapestry out of all these threads, with results I can only describe as profound and inspirational. By looking at recent history and its social upheavals through a lens informed by the latest ideas in these fields, he arrives at a very convincing and intriguing picture of the fundamentally different sort of world we are seeing develop around us right now.

Beside the wise observation and intelligent synthesis, though, he also does something else that's very rare with these sorts of projects: he attempts to explain his theory in practice. The last chapter of the book tells of his experiences over the past few years creating a new kind of company engaged in shifting some paradigms in higher education. It's great to see how Taylor has tried to put his ideas to work in the field that he knows best; as a professor, his personal and professional experience with colleges and universities are where his "theory of everything" touches the ground. Still, though it's a tall order, I would have loved to see perhaps one more real-world example. Perhaps this would have required partnering with someone from another field to co-author one more chapter, but the connections between the heady wisdom and the real world would have then been that much more clear.

However, that's a minor criticism. All in all, "The Moment of Complexity" is a book I would recommend highly. Anyone with a bit of patience, an ability to grasp some extended analogies, and a hunger to connect our present time with past developments in multiple streams of thought, should read this book.

15 of 18 people found the following review helpful
Amazing And Very Thorough - "Shallow" This Book Is So Not! 8 Jan 2004
By jimmi cali - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Unlike Richard Lightburn below, who, after acknowledging that he knows relatively nothing about chaos, catastrophe, and complexity theory, goes on to assert that Mark Taylor "has it all wrong", "is...naive and superficial", and speaks "gibberish", I am going to give you a hint of what's really in these pages, as the other reviewers seem keen on doing.

I won't go overboard, but to call this book "shallow" is absurd. Mark Taylor explores the intersection of chaos/catastrophe/complexity theory (which he ably distinguishes between, with rave reviews to that effect from two of the main proponents of these theories), critical theory (which Richard Lightweight clearly is not patient enough to digest), architecture (fascinating inclusion based upon grids evolving to networks), and networking theory.

The chapter on architecture alone, if tackled with due respect and patience, and willing to tease out the details and nuance that Taylor is drawing, is worth the price of the book alone, and that's the first chapter after the introduction. The next chapter on critical theory is even more challenging, and definitely the point where an eager reader seeking to learn about chaos, complexity, and networking theory is going to wonder what the hell is wrong with this book.

Perhaps if such a reader went back to the introduction, he would gratefully realize that these first two difficult chapters are not necessary to or a prerequisite for the next several chapters which go into, depth and detail, the fascinating theories he's seeking.

Having reached these chapters now myself, I will reap what the first two chapters slowly sewed (though, to be honest, the explanation of critical theory, and Foucault's work in particular, is a very challenging read, and makes one yearn for something simple like "rocket science"). So if that's not your bag, then just skip the critical theory chapter, but don't miss the architectural chapter on the "grid". It's worth the time.

As, I'm sure, is the rest. We'll see...

5 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Deep but Clear 27 Feb 2006
By J. Braun - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
I'm finding this to be very clear but not on a simple level. Subject matter is repeated from various angles so as to gradually build up more and more comprehensive logic and visualization of the theories and concepts. Author clarifies the differences between chaos and complexity, and shows how complexity exists in the physical and the social realms. I'm reading this book in conjunction with others, namely The Quantum Brain, by Jeffrey Santinover, and Symmetry and the Beautiful Universe, by Leon M. Lederman and Christopher T. Hill, and these books support and overlap each other.
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