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The Social Atom: Why the rich get richer, cheats get caught and you neighbor usually looks like you
 
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The Social Atom: Why the rich get richer, cheats get caught and you neighbor usually looks like you (Hardcover)

by Mark Buchanan (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Cyan Books and Marshall Cavendish (28 Jun 2007)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0462099148
  • ISBN-13: 978-0462099149
  • Product Dimensions: 21.4 x 14.6 x 2.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 397,773 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Product Description

Product Description

A groundbreaking social theory reveals the essential and surprising simplicity of human behavior. Why are some bars crowded one week and empty the next? What keeps a book on the bestseller list? What makes ethnic violence break out? Why do neighborhoods gentrify all of a sudden? What causes the stock market to fluctuate? Look at patterns, not people, the way that physicists observe atoms, and you will find the answers. For years, the idiosyncrasies of human decision-making have confounded economists and social theorists, most of whom have relied on an old way of thinking that says the social world is complicated because people are complicated. Now, says theoretical physicist Mark Buchanan, we're witnessing something akin to a quantum revolution in the social sciences. The laws of physics are beginning to provide a new picture of the human or social atom and this is a picture that does not conflict with the existence of individual free will. Just as atomic-level chaos gives way to the clockwork precision of thermodynamics, so can free individuals come together into predictable patterns. Social physicists can dissect fads, anticipate whether companies will succeed or fail, and explain crime waves. In this eye-opening book, Buchanan suggests that understanding the laws of collective organization is the key challenge of our age. Brimming with mind games and provocative experiments, The Social Atom is an incisive, accessible, and comprehensive argument for a whole new way to look at human social behavior.


About the Author

Mark Buchanan is a science writer whose previous books, Ubiquity (Orion, 2001) and Small World (Orion, 2003), were critically acclaimed. He is the former editor of Nature and features editor of New Scientist magazines.

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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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 (1)
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3 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
3.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A disappointing read, 7 Mar 2009
By Kristjan Wager (Copenhagen, Denmark) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
The main thesis discussed in this book is that social science and economics is flawed because it looks at people as individuals, instead of groups behaving in patterns. Buchanan claims that if you look at individuals as atoms interacting with each other. you'll realize that people behave in ways (patterns) that can be observed to be like other patterns occurring in nature, and thus it's possible to predict what is going to happen in e.g. the market.

All of this is of course interesting, and Buchanan does make a good case for it, but I have some serious issues with the book.

If you've read Buchanan's book, Nexus, it'll come as no surprise to you that Buchanan suffers from a severe case of physicist glorifying, believing that they are experts at overturning dogma in existing non-physics fields. This comes through even more clearly in "The Social Atom", where Buchanan makes it clear that he doesn't think much of economic theory, which is generally based on flawed premises. Buchanan does well at explaining why, while giving a simplified introduction to economic concepts like "rational individuals".

The problem is that he seems to not realize that his simplified version is not the full version, and that economists are fully aware of the problems with these concepts.

No economist, except perhaps members of the Chicago School, really believes that people are/act rational (or that markets are really transparent), but because economic models are incredible complex, it's been necessary to operate under these flawed assumptions, as to be actually be able to use the models at all. In other words, while the assumptions are flawed, it makes it possible to make an approximation of reality.

As computers have become more and more powerful, it has become possible to re-evaluate these assumptions, and dismiss the flawed ones. This could of course only be done, as the reality underlying those concepts became apparent through computer models/analysis, which is the very process Buchanan describes in his book. In other words, Buchanan complains of economics using simplified models/abstractions, while explaining the very process of making it possible for economists to not use them.

It would be like me complaining about physicists using a simplified model of the universe (or the atom, or gravity, whatever), while explaining how it is now finally possible to make a more complex (and correct) model, and what that model shows.

Another problem I have with the book is that it's light on science, and while it often mentions that something (the market, people in cities etc.) behaves in a certain way that's similar to a patten observed in nature, it usually doesn't explain WHY it behaves that way. That's problematic when you're writing a book about a descriptive field, which economics is.

All in all, I'm quite lurk warm towards the book. It has some interesting ideas, and it's pretty well written. However, if you, like me, have any type of background in economics, you'll get distracted by the flaws and oversimplifications. On top of that, you'll probably have heard about most of the experiments mentioned in the book.
In the end, I won't say that you shouldn't read it (unless you are an economist), but I won't recommend it either.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars old news, 21 Sep 2008
By Dr. Steppy (Newcastle upon Tyne, UK) - See all my reviews
Sorry, but all these ideas have been discussed before, in far more sophisticated and informative ways, in the field of social theory. If you want to know about the social world consult a sociologist or anthropologist. Try Pierre Bourdieu and his 'Logic of Practice'.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars New thinking for a new age, 27 Jan 2008
By David Dale "davesald" - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This book makes so much sense. It clarifies the behaviour we all experience and it achieves this through a re framing of the social and economic world using parallels from the laws of physics and mathematics.
I strongly suspect the postulations made are the start of significant social learning and such concepts encourage optimism that solutions will be found in many fields that rely on a full understanding of human interaction. If you are involved with people on a large scale you should read this book.
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