Overview
- Urges a re-evaluation of science and medicine in order to embrace a more holistic and anticipatory approach
- Exposes the consequences of reactive measures during the COVID-19 pandemic, emphasizing the need for actions
- Proposes a “Second Revolution in Science” as a transformative path, advocating for a renewed understanding of life
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About this book
Reaction to breakdowns is more expensive, by many orders of magnitude, than prevention. This again became clear during the COVID-19 pandemic and is evinced in the sustainability crisis. The dynamics of living matter transcends deterministic reaction. Embodied in machines, determinism empowered the human being, providing the path to prosperity. However, in conjunction with reductionism, it does away with complexity, in which life is couched.
The living is by necessity anticipatory. Awareness of the future means preserving life not in reaction to, but in anticipation of change. Living entities, from the simplest bacteria, to plants and insects, to human beings, are adaptive, goal-oriented, and capable of self-healing. Anticipatory actions are expressed through non-deterministic processes that unfold in concert with reactions. They engage the wholeness of life, including its interactions with the environment. Awareness of consequences, together with memory of the past, informs actions that reflect the creative nature of human beings. Redefining science—and implicitly, medicine—is not a negation of its past, but rather an affirmation of trust in explaining life’s capacity to renew itself. As opposed to increasingly expensive medicine as a practice of repair, to prevent and to heal is to make life sustainable.
The moment of truth can no longer be postponed. At stake is the future of humankind and even of life on planet Earth. Reductionist determinism informs the obsession with progress at any cost. Awareness of the fact that the human condition transcends that of the matter in which it is embodied explains, and indeed justifies, the call to Disrupt Science in its current state. The age of the digital machine, in particular of artificial intelligence, is one of opportunities that pale when compared to its inherent risks. The record of breakdowns (including so-called natural disasters), by now global in scale, is part of the empirical premise for the call for completing the Cartesian Revolution. A “Second Revolution in Science” could unleash humanity’s remaking, free of surrendering to want. Science has the opportunity not only to measure everything—life included—and accumulate data and process it for its own sake, but also to realize its meaning.
The book cover is designed by Baruch Gorkin, who is celebrated internationally for exquisite typefaces and for books reflecting meaning-driven design.
Keywords
Table of contents (8 chapters)
Authors and Affiliations
Bibliographic Information
Book Title: Disrupt Science
Book Subtitle: The Future Matters
Authors: Mihai Nadin
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-43957-5
Publisher: Springer Cham
eBook Packages: Intelligent Technologies and Robotics, Intelligent Technologies and Robotics (R0)
Copyright Information: The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023
Hardcover ISBN: 978-3-031-43956-8Published: 19 November 2023
Softcover ISBN: 978-3-031-43959-9Due: 02 December 2024
eBook ISBN: 978-3-031-43957-5Published: 18 November 2023
Edition Number: 1
Number of Pages: IX, 255
Number of Illustrations: 13 b/w illustrations, 21 illustrations in colour
Topics: Computational Intelligence, Complexity, Engineering Mathematics