Constructal Theory of Social Dynamics

Front Cover
Adrian Bejan, Gilbert W. Merkx
Springer Science & Business Media, Oct 26, 2007 - Science - 350 pages

Constructal Theory of Social Dynamics brings together for the first time social scientists and engineers to develop a predictive theory of social organization, as a conglomerate of mating flows that morph in time to flow more easily (people, goods, money, energy, information). These flows have objectives (e.g., minimization of effort, travel time, cost), and the objectives clash with global constraints (space, time, resources). The result is organization (flow architecture) derived from one principle of configuration evolution in time (the constructal law): "for a flow system to persist in time, its configuration must morph such that it provides easier access to its streams."

Constructal theory predicts animal design and geophysical flows, and makes evolution a part of physics. In the social sciences, there is substantial literature based on the use of optima to deduce social, population and economic dynamics. The constructal approach of this book links social sciences with physics, biology and engineering. The book explores the deterministic principle that generates a broad array of patterned phenomena, in demography, geography, communications, hierarchy, and multiple scales. Examples are the distribution of living settlements, the occurrence of flow structure inside each settlement, ‘development’ as the relation between fast-flowing societies and advancement and wealth, migration patterns, and globalization.

Constructal Theory of Social Dynamics is novel and important because it puts the occurrence of social organization on a scientific basis. It brings social organization under the same physics principle that accounts for the generation of flow architecture (design) in geophysical flows, animal design, and engineered flows. This exploratory work adds a dose of determinism to the modeling and predicting of societal flows.

 

Contents

0BEJAN01pdf
1
0BEJAN02pdf
35
0BEJAN03pdf
51
0BEJAN04pdf
71
0BEJAN05pdf
84
0BEJAN06pdf
119
0BEJAN07pdf
146
0BEJAN08pdf
161
0BEJAN11pdf
197
0bejan12pdf
224
0BEJAN13pdf
247
0BEJAN14pdf
263
0BEJAN15pdf
279
0BEJAN16pdf
297
0BEJAN17pdf
315
0BEJANindpdf
345

0BEJAN09pdf
169
0BEJAN10pdf
183

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 162 - Here we ran into the first bit of difficulty: he seemed to have a great deal of trouble letting go of the coin. He would rub it up against the inside of the container, pull it back out, and clutch it firmly for several seconds. However, he would finally turn it loose and receive his food reinforcement. Then the final contingency: we put him on a ratio of 2, requiring that he pick up both coins and put them in the container. Now the raccoon really had problems (and so did we). Not only could he not...
Page 151 - It is the thesis of this book that society can only be understood through a study of the messages and the communication facilities which belong to it ; and that in the future development of these messages and communication facilities, messages between man and machines, between machines and man, and between machine and machine, are destined to play an everincreasing part.
Page 162 - The response concerned the manipulation of money by the raccoon (who has "hands" rather smiliar to those of the primates). The contingency for reinforcement was picking up the coins and depositing them in a 5-inch metal box. Raccoons condition readily, have good appetites, and this one was quite tame and an eager subject. We anticipated no trouble. Conditioning him to pick up the first coin was simple. We started out by reinforcing him for picking up a single coin. Then the metal container was introduced,...
Page 46 - In-migration fields for Mexican undocumenteds to the US, Mid1970s (State abbreviations: BC = Baja California; Chi — Chihuahua; Coa — Coahuila; DF = Distrito Federal; Dur = Durango; Gro — Guerrero; Gto — Guanajuato; Jal = Jalisco; Mic = Michoacan; NL — Nuevo Leon; Oax = Oaxaca; Pue = Puebla; Sin = Sinaloa; SLP — San Luis Potosi; Son — Sonora; Tam = Tamaulipas; Zac = Zacatecas.) poor states send large numbers of migrants (see Jones; Roberts; and Dagodag, Chap.
Page 342 - Pasti, L., Volterra, A., Pozzan, T., and Carmignoto, G. (1997). Intracellular calcium oscillations in astrocytes: a highly plastic, bidirectional form of communication between neurons and astrocytes in situ. J. Neurosci.
Page 72 - For a finite-size system to persist in time (to live), it must evolve in such a way that it provides easier access to the imposed currents that flow through it.
Page 150 - The Principle of Least Effort as the primary principle that governs our entire individual and collective behavior of all sorts, including the behavior of our language and preconceptions.
Page 151 - To me, personally, the fact that the signal in its intermediate stages has gone through a machine rather than through a person is irrelevant and does not in any case greatly change my relation to the signal. Thus the theory of control in engineering, whether human or animal or mechanical, is a chapter in the theory of messages.
Page 150 - ... (p. 1). This principle, of course, refers to the "Principle of Least Effort," which is defined as meaning that "each individual will adopt a course of action that will involve the expenditure of the probably least average of his work (by definition, least effort)
Page 116 - Transmission of H7N7 avian influenza A virus to human beings during a large outbreak in commercial poultry farms in the Netherlands.