This essay suggests that humanity has experienced several instances where lots of information (‘big data’) had to be accommodated, which led to new structures for channeling the subsequent data flows. These structures, such as articulated speech and writing, would be analogs to the ‘dissipative structures’ that emerge in physical systems characterized by strong energy (i.e. heat) gradients. Additional examples from oceanography, meteorology and ecology are given, with some emphasis on the prescient work of Alexander von Humboldt, whose identification of ecological communities was based on the occurrence records of multiple species. His lead was initially not followed up, but it can be now, as millions of occurrence records are available, along with the technology to manipulate them. The structures that will emerge in the process, however, are as unpredictable as dissipative structures in physical systems.
Big data and the emergence of new ‘dissipative’ structures
Published 2017 in Ethics in Science and Environmental Politics
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- Publication year
2017
- Venue
Ethics in Science and Environmental Politics
- Publication date
2017-09-01
- Fields of study
Philosophy, Computer Science, Environmental Science
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