How Technology is Recreating the 21st-century Economy [PARC Forum]
by PARC, a Xerox company
- 1,594 views
PARC Forum Presents: Every 50 years or so a new body of technology comes along and slowly transforms the economy. Can such a transformation be happening today? And if so... how does it work?
PARC Forum Presents: Every 50 years or so a new body of technology comes along and slowly transforms the economy. Can such a transformation be happening today? And if so... how does it work?
Brian Arthur -- an external professor at the Santa Fe Institute, pioneer of complexity theory, and longtime PARC Visiting Researcher – will attempt to answer these and other questions in this PARC Forum talk.
Digital technology runs deeper than merely providing computation, internet commerce, and social media. It is silently creating a second, unseen economy that is deeply interconnected, invisible, self-configuring, and intelligent -- and this, he argues, is changing the ways business and the economy are structured.
W. Brian Arthur is an External Faculty Member at the Santa Fe Institute and Visiting Researcher at PARC.
Arthur pioneered the modern study of positive feedbacks/ increasing returns in the economy -- in particular, their role in magnifying small, random economic events -- and this work became the basis of our understanding of the high-tech economy. Arthur is also one of the pioneers of the science of complexity.
His most recent book is The Nature of Technology: What It Is and How It Evolves, in which he argued that technology is self-creating (though it requires human agency to build it up and reproduce it) and evolves much like organisms evolve (though radical novelty in technology cannot be explained by the Darwinian model of variation and selection, and instead arises by combining existing elements).
Arthur was the Morrison Professor of Economics and Population Studies at Stanford University, and the first director of the Economics Program at the Santa Fe Institute in New Mexico. He earned his Ph.D. from Berkeley in Operations Research and has other degrees in economics, engineering, and mathematics including two honorary doctorates.
Among his many honors, Arthur received the Schumpeter Prize in economics and the Lagrange Prize in complexity science.
Statistics
- Likes
- 3
- Downloads
- 0
- Comments
- 1
- Embed Views
- Views on SlideShare
- 1,594
- Total Views
- 1,594
I am Modester by name good day. i just went to your profile this time true this site (www.slideshare.net) and i got your detail and your explanation in fact the way you explain your self shows me that you are innocent and maturity and also understand person i decided to have a contact with you so that we can explain to our self each other because God great everyone to make a friend with each other and from that we know that we are from thism planet God great for us ok my dear please try and reach me through my email address (modester4life4@yahoo.com) so that i can send you my picture true your reply we can know each other ok have a nice day and God bless you yours Modester 1 year ago