| Mitchell M. Waldrop - 1993 - 390 pagina’s
...So there you have the economic problem in a nutshell, he told Holland. How do we make a science out of imperfectly smart agents exploring their way into an essentially infinite space of possibilities? "A ha\" said Holland, the way he always does when he finally sees the light. Chess! Now this was a... | |
| Theodore E. D. Braun, John Aloysius McCarthy - 2000 - 244 pagina’s
...in a question posed during the eighties by the economist Brian Arthur: "How do we make a science out of imperfectly smart agents exploring their way into an essentially infinite space of possibilities?" Such systems are always evolving, never in true equilibrium, usually at the very "edge" of chaos. The... | |
| Japan Association for Evolutionary Economics, Yuji Aruka - 2001 - 274 pagina’s
...Arthur led Holland to believe that the real problem with economics is "how do we make a science out of imperfectly smart agents exploring their way into an essentially infinite space of possibilities?" (Waldrop 1992 p. 151). On the other hand, Arthur was impressed by Holland's approach to complex adaptive... | |
| John Fulcher, L. C. Jain - 2008 - 1182 pagina’s
...Arthur led Holland to believe that the real problem with economics is "how do we make a science out of imperfectly smart agents exploring their way into an essentially infinite space of possibilities?" [152]: 151. On the other hand, Arthur was impressed by Holland's approach to complex adaptive systems.... | |
| |