Notebooks

Adaptation

Last update: 05 May 1997 15:22
First version:

He marvelled at the fact that cats had two holes cut in their fur at precisely the spot where their eyes were.
---G. C. Lichtenberg, Aphorisms G26
What, exactly, does it mean for something to "adapt"? What kinds of adapters (adaptors?) are there, and how do they adapt? (Darwin Machines are one sort; Bernard Machines another.) How good are they at it? How do they improve? Is it a good idea to make machines adapters? How about buildings?
    Recommended:
  • W. Ross Ashby, Design for a Brain
  • Claude Bernard, Introduction to the Study of Experimental Medicine
  • Stewart Brand, How Buildings Learn
  • Charles Darwin, On the Origin of Species [Try to get the first edition; Harvard publishes a fascimile with an excellent introduction by Ernst Mayr.]
  • Richard Dawkins
    • The Selfish Gene
    • The Extended Phenotype
    • The Blind Watchmaker
  • Daniel Dennett, Darwin's Dangerous Idea
  • T. H. Frazzetta, Complex Adaptations in Evolving Populations [Has a certain ring to it, no? --- Thoughts on evading the "what good is half a wing?" problem beloved of creationists]
  • John Holland
  • Herbert Simon, The Sciences of the Artificial
  • Gerd Sommerhoff, Analytical Biology [Attempts to define adaptation rigorously. Highly suggestive and plausible, but he perversely assumes determinism, and it's not obvious to me how to reformulate his ideas stochastically.]
  • D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson, On Growth and Form
  • Bruce Wallace and Adrian M. Srb, Adaptation
  • George C. Willams, Adaptation and Natural Selection; a Critique of Some Current Evolutionary Thought
    To read:
  • R. McNeill Alexander, Optima for Animals
  • John R. Anderson, The Adaptive Character of Thought
  • Rick Belew and Melanie Mitchell, Adaptive Individuals in Evolving Populations: Models and Algorithms
  • Josh Bongard, Victor Zykov and Hod Lipson, "Resilient Machines Through Continuous Self-Modeling", Science 314 (2006): 1118--1121
  • Robert Brandon, Adaptation and Environment
  • G. D. Hale Carpenter, Mimicry
  • Michael Conrad, Adaptability: The Significance of Variability from Molecule to Ecosystem
  • Paul Sheldon Davies, Norms of Nature: Naturalism and the Nature of Functions
  • Rene D'Hulst and G. J. Rodgers, "Efficiency and persistence in models of adaptation," cond-mat/0105189
  • René Dubos
    • So Human an Animal
    • Man Adapting
  • John Dupre (ed.), The Latest on the Best: Essays on Evolution and Optimality
  • William FitzPatrick, Teleology and the Norms of Nature
  • Verne Grant, The Origin of Adaptations
  • Brian L. Keeley, "Fixing content and function in neurobiological systems: The neuroethology of electroreception", Biology and Philosophy 14: 395--430 [HTML preprint]
  • Merrell, The Adaptive Seascape
  • Donald J. Ortner, How Humans Adapt: a Biocultural Odyssey
  • Jay Schulkin, Rethinking Homeostasis: Allostatic Regulation in Physiology and Pathophysiology
  • Jay Schulkin (ed.), Allostasis, Homeostasis and the Costs of Physiological Adaptation [Blurb]
  • Eduardo D. Sontag
  • J. E. R. Staddon, Adaptive Dynamics: The Theoretical Analysis of Behavior [Blurb]
  • Marc Toussaint, "Self-adaptive exploration in evolutionary search," physics/0102009
  • Andreas Wagner, Robustness and Evolvability in Living Systems [Blurb, chapter 1]


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