Introduction to Artificial Life

Introduction to Artificial Life

Author: Christoph Adami

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 1998

Total Pages: 402

ISBN-13: 9780387946467

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For students, researchers and professional scientist eager to gain insight into the emerging frontiers of Artifical Life, Chris Adami's work provides the basic underpinnings for properly understanding this interdisciplinary research area. The CD-ROM accompanying the book invites readers to actively experience artificial evolution in "real time" by using a proprietary simulation software program, AVIDA, which is contained on the CD.


Artificial Life Lab

Artificial Life Lab

Author: Rudy von Bitter Rucker

Publisher:

Published: 1993

Total Pages: 277

ISBN-13: 9781878739483

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An award-winning writer gives the inside scoop on artificial life--what it is, and what to expect in the future. Readers can experiment with the processes that govern life, the behavior of living systems, and evolution. The enclosed disk includes the powerful Bugland program and 30 artificial life worlds that work with Windows 3.1.


Creating Life in the Lab

Creating Life in the Lab

Author: Fazale Rana

Publisher: Baker Books

Published: 2011-02-01

Total Pages: 240

ISBN-13: 1441214585

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Each year brings to light new scientific discoveries that have the power to either test our faith or strengthen it--most recently the news that scientists have created artificial life forms in the laboratory. If humans can create life, what does that mean for the creation story found in Scripture? Biochemist and Christian apologist Fazale Rana, for one, isn't worried. In Creating Life in the Lab, he details the fascinating quest for synthetic life and argues convincingly that when scientists succeed in creating life in the lab, they will unwittingly undermine the evolutionary explanation for the origin of life, demonstrating instead that undirected chemical processes cannot produce a living entity.


Artificial Life 8

Artificial Life 8

Author: Russell K. Standish

Publisher: MIT Press

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 458

ISBN-13: 9780262692816

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How high-level behaviors arise from low-level rules, and how understanding this relationship can suggest novel solutions to complex real-world problems such as disease prevention, stock-market prediction, and data mining on the Internet. The term "artificial life" describes research into synthetic systems that possess some of the essential properties of life. This interdisciplinary field includes biologists, computer scientists, physicists, chemists, geneticists, and others. Artificial life may be viewed as an attempt to understand high-level behavior from low-level rules -- for example, how the simple interactions between ants and their environment lead to complex trail-following behavior. An understanding of such relationships in particular systems can suggest novel solutions to complex real-world problems such as disease prevention, stock-market prediction, and data mining on the Internet. Since their inception in 1987, the Artificial Life meetings have grown from small workshops to truly international conferences, reflecting the field's increasing appeal to researchers in all areas of science.


Artificial Life

Artificial Life

Author: Steven Levy

Publisher: Vintage

Published: 1992

Total Pages: 412

ISBN-13: 9780679743897

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This enthralling book alerts us to nothing less than the existence of new varieties of life. Some of these species can move and eat, see, reproduce, and die. Some behave like birds or ants. One such life form may turn out to be our best weapon in the war against AIDS. What these species have in common is that they exist inside computers, their DNA is digital, and they have come into being not through God's agency but through the efforts of a generation of scientists who seek to create life in silico. But even as it introduces us to these brilliant heretics and unravels the intricacies of their work. Artificial Life examines its subject's dizzying philosophical implications: Is a self-replicating computer program any less alive than a flu virus? Are carbon-and-water-based entities merely part of the continuum of living things? And is it possible that one day "a-life" will look back at human beings and dismiss us as an evolutionary way station -- or, worse still, a dead end?


Virtual Organisms

Virtual Organisms

Author: Mark Ward

Publisher: Macmillan

Published: 2014-06-24

Total Pages: 295

ISBN-13: 1466874309

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Harmless artificial life forms are on the loose on the Internet. Computer viruses and even robots are now able to evolve like their biological counterparts. Telecommunications companies are sending small packets of software to go forth and multiply to cope with ever-increasing telephone traffic. Protein-based computers are on the agenda, and a team in Japan is building an organic brain as clever as a kitten. Welcome to the startling world of Artificial Life. Artificial Life scientists are taking inanimate materials such as computer software and robots and making them behave just like living organisms. In the process they are discovering much about what drives evolution and just what it means to say that something is alive. Virtual Organisms traces the origins of this field from the days when it was practiced by a few maverick scientists to the present and the current boom in Alife research. Leading technology correspondent Mark Ward presents a fascinating survey of current ideas about the origins of life and the engines of evolution. Through interviews with leading developers of Artificial Life, and through his own compelling research, Ward shows how the convergence of technology with biology has enormous implications. In an accessible, entertaining manner, Virtual Organisms reveals an unexplored avenue in predicting the future of Artificial Life, and whether new forms of Alife may be evolving beyond their designer's control.


Laboratory Life

Laboratory Life

Author: Bruno Latour

Publisher: Princeton University Press

Published: 2013-04-04

Total Pages: 295

ISBN-13: 1400820413

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This highly original work presents laboratory science in a deliberately skeptical way: as an anthropological approach to the culture of the scientist. Drawing on recent work in literary criticism, the authors study how the social world of the laboratory produces papers and other "texts,"' and how the scientific vision of reality becomes that set of statements considered, for the time being, too expensive to change. The book is based on field work done by Bruno Latour in Roger Guillemin's laboratory at the Salk Institute and provides an important link between the sociology of modern sciences and laboratory studies in the history of science.


Artificial Life - What Is Artificial Life?

Artificial Life - What Is Artificial Life?

Author: Sabine Heller

Publisher: GRIN Verlag

Published: 2009-10

Total Pages: 25

ISBN-13: 3640435060

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Master's Thesis from the year 2005 in the subject Art - Computer Art / Graphics / Art in Media, grade: A, School of visual arts (MFA Computer Art), language: English, abstract: What are Artificial Life and Artificial Intelligence and what is the difference between these two topics? My thesis paper deals with these questions and explores the differences and the thoughts Artificial Life and Artificial Intelligence have in common. It is a short research of the history of Artificial Life and its connected philosophical, moral and ethical questions.


Cyberfeminism and Artificial Life

Cyberfeminism and Artificial Life

Author: Sarah Kember

Publisher: Psychology Press

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 276

ISBN-13: 9780415240277

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Examining the construction, manipulation and re-definition of life in contemporary technoscientific culture, this book aims to re-focus concern on the ethics rather than on the 'nature' of artificial life.