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II. Pedia Sapiens: A Planetary Progeny Comes to Her/His Own Actual Factual KnowledgeC. Earthica Learns as a Symbiotic Person/Planet, Collaborative Ecosmo Sapience Frontiers in Computational Methods for Active Matter. www.cecam.org/workshop1797. This is a workshop organized by the European Center for Atomic and Molecular Calculations CECAM and the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology held in Lausanne in mid February, 2020. Typical presentations are Collective Behavior and Self-Organization of Active Granular Particles and Active Matter Driven by Growth, with a book of abstract available from this site. We cite this event for itself and to record the annual series run by these agencies. Altogether they convey the multiversal scientific considerations going forth locally and worldwide. Some other workshop titles are Atomistic Simulations in Prebiotic Chemistry, Active Matter and Artificial Intelligence, Network analysis to elucidate natural system dynamics, Deep Learning in Materials Science, and Software Development in Quantum Dynamics. In view of the broad range of active matter systems, various numerical approaches have been developed to model such systems. Some of the major challenges arising in modeling active systems are: (i) Active matter is a multiscale material similar to other complex fluids such as milk or blood, (ii) Active fluids are intrinsically out of equilibrium due to energy consumption on microscopic scale, (iii) The interactions between active particles can be highly nonlinear and are often of multibody character (e.g. hydrodynamic interactions or interactions due to chemical stimuli), (iv) Active particles are mostly not simple geometrical objects, such as hard spheres, but rather of complex shape due to propulsion and other functional units. The goal of this workshop is to bring together the experts in modeling soft condensed matter and biological systems to tie recent advances in computational techniques and the most recent ideas and concepts of active matter theory. (Summary)
FuturICT: New Science and Technology to Manage Our Complex, Strongly Connected World.
www.futurict.eu.
Inspired by ETH Zurich systems sociologist Dirk Helbing and colleagues, an array of universities, research institutions, businesses, and government agencies formed this consortium to plan and achieve a European and global computation internetwork so as to understand and solve problems that now daunt us as individuals. An enabling impetus is said to be the paradigm shift from objects alone to equally include relational dynamics, the nonlinear revolution. Click on a “Science” section to find a distinguished list of Partners, some 100 men and 10 women, across areas such as Planetary-Scale Reality Mining, Architectures and Processes for Social Supercomputing, Human Information Symbiosis and Ethics, Crisis Observatories, Smart Cities, and so on. Today, we know more about the universe than about our society. It's time to use the power of information to explore social and economic life on Earth and discover options for a sustainable future. Together, we can manage the challenges of the 21st century, combining the best of all knowledge. We think that integrating ICT, Complexity Science and the Social Sciences will create a paradigm shift, facilitating a symbiotic co-evolution of ICT and society. Data from our complex globe-spanning ICT system will be leveraged to develop models of techno-socio-economic systems. In turn, insights from these models will inform the development of a new generation of socially adaptive, self-organized ICT systems. FuturICT as a whole will act as a Knowledge Accelerator, turning massive data into knowledge and technological progress. In this way, FuturICT will create the scientific methods and ICT platforms needed to address planetary-scale challenges and opportunities in the 21st century. Specifically, FuturICT will build a sophisticated simulation, visualization and participation platform, called the Living Earth Platform. Global Brain Institute. sites.google.com/site/gbialternative1.. The home page for this Free University of Brussels endeavor to engage and scope out into the 2010s the enveloping, vital presence of a worldwide cerebral faculty as it may gain an intelligence, knowledge and life of its own. The veteran director is Francis Heylighen, search for his comprehensive papers, and for members such as Clement Vidal, Marta Lenartowicz and Dirk Helbing. We see people, machines and software systems as agents that communicate via complex network links. These agents contribute their own expertise to resolving problems and challenges. Thus the skills of different agents are pooled into a collective intelligence much greater than that of its individual members. This propagation across the global network is a complex process of self-organization. It is similar to the "spreading activation" that characterizes thinking in the human brain. This process will change the network by reinforcing useful links, while weakening less useful ones. So it can be said that the network learns and becomes more intelligent. Information and Noise: Chemistry, Biology and Evolution Creating Complex Systems. www.beilstein-institut.de/files/abstractbook_beilstein_bozen_symposium_2018_download.pdf. This is an international June 2018 symposium held in Rudesheim, Germany sponsored by the Beilstein Institut, see quotes below. This URL reaches the conference book along with extensive abstracts. Leroy Cronin and Tim Clark were the main organizers. A diverse array of senior speakers included Antoine Danchin (Information/Matter Interplay Conceals Life’s Universal Laws), Susan Stepney, Kepa Ruiz-Mirazo (Information as a Principle of Organization for Biology), Ulrich Kutschera, Thomas Ouldridge, Irene Chen and David Wolpert. When do chemical systems become biological ones? What needs to happen for molecules Ising Lectures – 2017. http://www.icmp.lviv.ua/ising/index.html. As the 20th Annual Workshop on Phase Transitions and Critical Phenomena under the esteemed German-Jewish (as he is known) mathematical physicist Ernst Ising (1990-1998). It occurs in June in the ancient western Ukraine cultural city of Lviv, close to southern Poland. The presentations this year by senior European scientists include The Search for Universality in Finite-Size Scaling by Ralph Kenna (search), The Fate of Ernst Ising and the Fate of His Model by Thomas Ising (son), along with Reinhard Folk, Bertrand Berche, and Yurij Holovatch (search). From the page, as for previous years, an extended abstract can be accessed for each speaker. The Abstract below is from Tom Ising, and is also posted at arXiv:1706.01764. And one cannot help notice the contrast of such learned wisdom amid a land so beset by tragic violence. On this, the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the "Ising Lectures" in Lviv (Ukraine), we give some personal reflections about the famous model that was suggested by Wilhelm Lenz for ferromagnetism in 1920 and solved in one dimension by his PhD student, Ernst Ising, in 1924. That work of Lenz and Ising marked the start of a scientific direction that, over nearly 100 years, delivered extraordinary successes in explaining collective behaviour in a vast variety of systems, both within and beyond the natural sciences. The broadness of the appeal of the Ising model is reflected in the variety of talks presented at the Ising lectures over the past two decades but requires that we restrict this report to a small selection of topics. The paper starts with some personal memoirs of Thomas Ising (Ernst's son). We then discuss the history of the model, exact solutions, experimental realisations, and its extension to other fields. ISIS Summit Vienna 2015. http://summit.is4is.org/about. . A biannual conference by the International Society for Information Studies to be held in June at Vienna University. Its title is The Information Society at the Crossroads: Response and Responsibility of the Sciences of Information. Within its compass of science, philosophy, ethics, and sustainable societies, a pantheon of theorists and activists such as Soren Brier, Rafael Capurro, John Collier, Terrence Deacon, Gordana Dodig-Crnkovic, Geraldine Fitzpatrick, Luciano Floridi, Francis Heylighen, Wolfgang Hofkirchner, Pedro Marijuan, Katharine Sarikakis, Gunther Witzany (talk abstract below), and others will convene and contribute over four days. The aim of the International Society for Information Studies (ISIS) summit is to bring together different communities that research into information (which shall be understood just as a generic term for cognition, communication, co-operation; data, knowledge, wisdom; intelligence; and the whole diversity of related terms), develop or implement applications of their findings (be they technological or social) or use those applications. That is, not only representatives of different disciplines meet but also the latter meet with different stakeholders. The summit shall help discuss the betterment of society. Thus it is an endeavour in transdisciplinarity. Life in the Universe 2019: Big History, SETI and the Future of Humankind. bighistory.org/2019-life-in-the-universe-conference-information. This mid July conference in Milan, Italy by the International Big History Association has become a resident venue for visionary cosmists. Its preliminary program includes The Singularity in Big History by Andrey Korotayev (search), A History of Cosmic Habitability by Amedeo Balbi, Breakthrough Listen by Andrew Siemion, Energy Rate Density as a Technosignature by Clement Vidal and Evo-SETI: A Methematical Big History by Claudio Maccone. Big History seeks to understand the integrated history of the Cosmos, Earth, Life, and Humanity, using the best available empirical evidence and scholarly methods. Almost a century ago, scientists gave us a new history of the cosmos by showing that our own galaxy, the Milky Way, was but one of an extraordinary number. In recent decades, scientists have located thousands of potentially habitable planets in just our own galaxy. Scientists at SETI are looking for evidence that there is (intelligent) life beyond Earth. What does it mean to the big history account when the lines from the Big Bang go not only to the Milky Way, Earth, life on Earth, and humanity, but in many other directions as well? Major Transitions in Human Evolution. royalsociety.org/events/2015/10/major-transitions. At this Royal Society and British Academy meeting in London in October 2015, a central feature will be discussions by Richard Leakey about how Sapiens came to be. It is worth noting in talk titles that the Major Transitions model is often availed as the main evolutionary sequence. Its sessions are: Transition 1: Origins of Home – Technology, Behaviour, and Adaption; Transition 2: Evolution of the Early Human Phenotype; and Transition 3: Tempo and Mode of Modern Humans. Speakers include Richard and Meave Leakey, Sonia Harmand, Chris Stringer, Marta Lahr, and Robert Foley. The rich human palaeoanthropological record shows an unexpectedly complex pattern in the tempo and mode of human evolution. Evidence for many of the key phases is found in East Africa, and has been shaped by critical discoveries by teams led by Richard Leakey, or work inspired by his finds. The meeting focuses on key evolutionary transitions to understand the interaction of biology, behaviour, culture and environment. Origins: From the Protosun to the First Steps of Life. astronomy2018.univie.ac.at/symposia/symposium345. An International Astronomical Union symposium (IAU 345) held in August 2018 in Vienna. We cite this long URL because it is where Abstracts can be found. An array of global scholars gave talks such as Cosmic Pathways to Life: From Interstellar Molecules to the first Traces of Life by Manuel Gudel, The Early Evolution of Terrestrial Planets by Helmut Lammer, Early Life on Earth by Addy Pross, The Properties of Earth-like Planets by Daniel Apai, and Unveiling the Whole from its Parts by Eduardo Pacheco, Water Inventory from the Jupiter Orbit to the Terrestrial Planets by Marov, Mikhail, and Bio-habitability and Life on Planets of M- to G-type Stars by Amri Wandel. Abstracts for M. Gudel, E. Pacheo, and A. Wandel are next. This symposium explores the chain of events that could have been involved in the formation of the Sun in the pre-solar galactic environment, planet Earth and the earliest lifeforms on it. On one hand we see the history of consecutive events, on the other hand parallel processes of various scales have been interacting since pre-solar times till today. An abridged topical list is: Galactic environments of the Earth and Sun, Formation of solar–type steps, Evolution of protostellar disks, Physical and chemical conditions in proto–solar nebula, Planetary systems around solar–type stars, Toward building Earth–analogs, and Steps toward habitability & early forms of life. (IAU345 summary) SETI Decoding Alien Intelligence Workshop. https://daiworkshop.seti.org/guest-papers. A unique meeting with a stellar cast to wonder all about extraterrestrial neighbors, relative life forms, (linguistic) communications, and much more, held at the SETI Institute, Mountain View, CA in March 2018. The event was a response to Nathalie Cabrol’s 2016 paper Alien Mindscapes (search) which entered an initial litany of topics and concerns. On the above site, abstracts and papers are posted such as Astrobiology: Thy Name is Synergy by Penelope Boston, Evolving SETI for the 21st Century by Steven Dick, Bio-Friendly Exoplanets by Seth Shostak, The Spiritual Quest in the SETI Research by Jose Funes, SJ, and Cognitive Planetary Transformations by David Grinspoon. Some other speakers were Jill Tarter, Lori Marino, Annamarie Berea, Terence Deacon, and Erik Zackrisson. A tacit assumption, it ought to be noted, was to treat exoworld civilizations, if they exist, as a whole, thinking planet, a noosphere entity (but this Earth has not yet been appreciated that way). Perhaps what SETI is searching for is not merely the appearance of a certain kind of civilization on a planet, but a transition in planetary evolution to what we might call the Sapiezoic Eon, in which cognitive processes become integrated into the functioning of a planet. Now we see the advent of a radically new type of global change: Self-aware cognitive/geological processes. If the “Anthropocene” marks the beginning of the Sapiezoic Eon - then it requires that cognitive processes can become a long-term stable part of a planet. Global technological influence contains both perils which threaten to make this a short-lived stage and the possibility that this phenomenon could become a very long-lived and even permanent part of the Earth system. I will discuss the possible observable properties of planets that have gone through a Sapiezoic transition. (Grinspoon) The Computer, the Brain, and the Internet. http://santafe.edu/events/abstract/1496. A posting for a Santa Fe Institute Public Lecture on May 27, 2009 by the neuroscience luminaries Marvin Minsky and Gerald Edelman. What is at once notable, as its Abstract conveys, is an advance from standalone PC computers to their worldwide network connectivity seen as the best current metaphor for a brain (again via the latest technology). By just turning this around, can it not imply that the global Internet can indeed be known as a cerebral Noosphere? In an effort to explain the brain, scientists have turned historically to computers, both as a tool for studying the brain and mind, and as a model for how the brain might work. We now live in the age of distributed data and computers, and the internet has emerged as a giant cobweb of communication among computers and their users. Some now suggest that the internet is our best current model for the brain, and thought is nothing but a form of search in the space of ideas. As we move towards more advanced technology, the brain, the computer, and the internet are progressively merging, and our identities and insights are assuming a radically new form. The Noosphere at 100: The Future of Human Collective Consciousness.. https://event.fourwaves.com/n2conference/pages.. A home page for a gathering all about the 100th anniversary of the prescient conception of a global brain-like formation foreseen by Pierre Teilhard, Vladimir Vernadsky and Pierre Leroy in Paris in the early 1920s. A century later a prime rationale is the major evolutionary transitions scale which well bodes for its a consummate fulfillment, see next quotes. The meeting was arranged by the Human Energy initiative, see below, founded and led by David Sloan Wilson. The whole show achieves treads an innovative frontier by way of especial concerned voices and visions. A full list of speaker bios and paper abstracts are available on the site. In regard, see The Third Story of the Universe: an evolutionary worldview for the noosphere by Francis Heylighen, et al (search herein) about a 21st century revolution.
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