Chaos and transformation: Implications of nonequilibrium theory for social science and society
- 1 January 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Behavioral Science
- Vol. 32 (1) , 53-65
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bs.3830320107
Abstract
This article deals with all levels of both living (biological, psychological, sociological, and cultural) and nonliving (physical, chemical, and mathematical) systems. The idea of applying the natural scientific self-organizing, evolutionary, and non-equilibrium or “chaos” theory associated with the names of Prigogine and others to world problems of impending social, political, economic, and ecological “chaos” is gaining ground. The leap from natural science to social action, however, is impossible without considerable attention to the main intervening step: the development of “chaos”-equivalent, evolution-, systems-, and action-oriented social theory. Construction of such theory requires understanding by social scientists of natural scientific “chaos” theory as well as their own “chaos” theoretical heritage, of natural scientists of the now seemingly far distant social problem-solving potential of their nonequilibrium and self-organizing theories, and of both natural and social scientists of how advancement at both levels could help gain a peaceful as well as humanistic “order out of chaos” in this troubled world of ours. This paper surveys relevant concepts, problems, theorists, research, and works in progress within a perspective of the challenge of survival at a critical juncture in the evolution of our species.Keywords
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