Herbert A. Simon believes there’s entirely too much natural science about.
Why should engineering—the avocation which makes things happen—not
get the status of science? His The Sciences of the Artificial (MIT,
£12.50, ISBN 0 262 69191 4) began with lectures in 1968, and his
thoroughly-updated third edition is a must-read for his “Carnegie-Mellon
symbolicist” takes on human memory and its place in consciousness, economics,
complexity, and social policy-making.
More from ¿ìè¶ÌÊÓÆµ
Explore the latest news, articles and features
Popular articles
Trending ¿ìè¶ÌÊÓÆµ articles
1
Pancreatic cancer halted by virus injection in three patients
2
The best new science-fiction books of June 2026
3
Photons behave very strangely if you try to cut them
4
Does gravity create reality? A shocking path to a theory of everything
5
Glaciers in the 'roof of the world' have suddenly started melting
6
How a radical new view of life could reveal its origin – and aliens
7
This neuroscientist says some psychopaths wish they were nicer
8
Q-Day could destroy bitcoin – and our retirement savings
9
Mathematicians stunned by AI's biggest breakthrough in mathematics yet
10
Aim high but don't shoot for the moon, mathematicians advise



