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Bonini's paradox

Bonini's paradox, named after Stanford business professor Charles Bonini, explains the difficulty in constructing models or simulations that fully capture the workings of complex systems (such as the human brain).[1]

Statements

In modern discourse, the paradox was articulated by John M. Dutton and William H. Starbuck:[2] "As a model of a complex system becomes more complete, it becomes less understandable. Alternatively, as a model grows more realistic, it also becomes just as difficult to understand as the real-world processes it represents."[3]

This paradox may be used by researchers to explain why complete models of the human brain and thinking processes have not been created and will undoubtedly remain difficult for years to come.

This same paradox was observed earlier from a quote by philosopher-poet Paul Valéry: "Ce qui est simple est toujours faux. Ce qui ne l’est pas est inutilisable".[4] ("If it's simple, it's always false. If it's not, it's unusable."[5])

Also, the same topic has been discussed by Richard Levins in his classic essay "The Strategy of Model Building in Population Biology", in stating that complex models have 'too many parameters to measure, leading to analytically insoluble equations that would exceed the capacity of our computers, but the results would have no meaning for us even if they could be solved.[6][7][8]

Related issues

Bonini's paradox can be seen as a case of the map–territory relation: simpler maps are less accurate though more useful representations of the territory. An extreme form is given in the fictional stories Sylvie and Bruno Concluded and "On Exactitude in Science", which imagine a map of a scale of 1:1 (the same size as the territory), which is precise but unusable, illustrating one extreme of Bonini's paradox. Isaac Asimov's fictional science of "Psychohistory" in his Foundation series also faces with this dilemma; Asimov even had one of his psychohistorians discuss the paradox.

See also

References

  1. ^ Charles P. Bonini (1963) Simulation of information and decision systems in the firm, Englewood Cliffs, N. J.: Prentice-Hall
  2. ^ W. H. Starbuck (1976) Organizations and their environments; In: M. D. Dunnette (ed.), Handbook of industrial and organizational psychology Chicago: Rand, p. 1069-1123
  3. ^ Dutton, John M; Starbuck, William H (1971). Computer Simulation of Human Behavior. Wiley. ISBN 0471228508.
  4. ^ Valéry, Paul (1942). Mauvaises pensées et autres. Paris: Éditions Gallimard.
  5. ^ Valéry, Paul (1970). Collected Works of Paul Valéry, Volume 14, Analects. Translated by Stuart Gilbert. Princeton University Press. p. 466.
  6. ^ Levins, Richard (1966). (PDF). American Scientist. 54 (4): 421–431. JSTOR 27836590. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 February 2016.
  7. ^ Odenbaugh, Jay (15 February 2007). "The strategy of "The strategy of model building in population biology"". Biology & Philosophy. 21 (5): 607–621. doi:10.1007/s10539-006-9049-3. S2CID 171020133.
  8. ^ Orzack, Steven Hecht; Sober, Elliott (December 1993). "A Critical Assessment of Levins's The Strategy of Model Building in Population Biology (1966)" (PDF). The Quarterly Review of Biology. 68 (4): 533–546. doi:10.1086/418301. S2CID 83524824.

bonini, paradox, named, after, stanford, business, professor, charles, bonini, explains, difficulty, constructing, models, simulations, that, fully, capture, workings, complex, systems, such, human, brain, contents, statements, related, issues, also, reference. Bonini s paradox named after Stanford business professor Charles Bonini explains the difficulty in constructing models or simulations that fully capture the workings of complex systems such as the human brain 1 Contents 1 Statements 2 Related issues 3 See also 4 ReferencesStatements EditIn modern discourse the paradox was articulated by John M Dutton and William H Starbuck 2 As a model of a complex system becomes more complete it becomes less understandable Alternatively as a model grows more realistic it also becomes just as difficult to understand as the real world processes it represents 3 This paradox may be used by researchers to explain why complete models of the human brain and thinking processes have not been created and will undoubtedly remain difficult for years to come This same paradox was observed earlier from a quote by philosopher poet Paul Valery Ce qui est simple est toujours faux Ce qui ne l est pas est inutilisable 4 If it s simple it s always false If it s not it s unusable 5 Also the same topic has been discussed by Richard Levins in his classic essay The Strategy of Model Building in Population Biology in stating that complex models have too many parameters to measure leading to analytically insoluble equations that would exceed the capacity of our computers but the results would have no meaning for us even if they could be solved 6 7 8 Related issues EditBonini s paradox can be seen as a case of the map territory relation simpler maps are less accurate though more useful representations of the territory An extreme form is given in the fictional stories Sylvie and Bruno Concluded and On Exactitude in Science which imagine a map of a scale of 1 1 the same size as the territory which is precise but unusable illustrating one extreme of Bonini s paradox Isaac Asimov s fictional science of Psychohistory in his Foundation series also faces with this dilemma Asimov even had one of his psychohistorians discuss the paradox See also EditAll models are wrong Common aphorism in statistics Lie to children Teaching a complex subject via simpler models Map territory relation Relationship between an object and a representation of that object On Exactitude in ScienceReferences Edit Charles P Bonini 1963 Simulation of information and decision systems in the firm Englewood Cliffs N J Prentice Hall W H Starbuck 1976 Organizations and their environments In M D Dunnette ed Handbook of industrial and organizational psychology Chicago Rand p 1069 1123 Dutton John M Starbuck William H 1971 Computer Simulation of Human Behavior Wiley ISBN 0471228508 Valery Paul 1942 Mauvaises pensees et autres Paris Editions Gallimard Valery Paul 1970 Collected Works of Paul Valery Volume 14 Analects Translated by Stuart Gilbert Princeton University Press p 466 Levins Richard 1966 The strategy of model building in population biology PDF American Scientist 54 4 421 431 JSTOR 27836590 Archived from the original PDF on 2 February 2016 Odenbaugh Jay 15 February 2007 The strategy of The strategy of model building in population biology Biology amp Philosophy 21 5 607 621 doi 10 1007 s10539 006 9049 3 S2CID 171020133 Orzack Steven Hecht Sober Elliott December 1993 A Critical Assessment of Levins s The Strategy of Model Building in Population Biology 1966 PDF The Quarterly Review of Biology 68 4 533 546 doi 10 1086 418301 S2CID 83524824 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bonini 27s paradox amp oldid 1112841692, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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