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The Santa Fe Institute (or SFI) is a non-profit research institute in Santa Fe, New Mexico founded by George Cowan, David Pines, Stirling Colgate, Murray Gell-Mann, Nick Metropolis, Herb Anderson, Peter A. Carruthers, and Richard Slansky in 1984 to study complex systems. All but Pines and Gell-Mann were scientists with Los Alamos National Laboratory.

SFI's original mission was to disseminate the notion of a separate interdisciplinary research area, complexity theory (referred to at SFI as "complexity science"), but it has recently announced that its original mission to develop and disseminate a general theory of complexity has been realized (noting that numerous complexity institutes and departments have sprung up around the world — cf. CCS, CSCS at the University of Michigan, the CSE at UC Davis and the NECSI), and that it was working on updating its mission for the coming fifty years.

Scientists associated with the Santa Fe Institute


Publications


The publications of the Santa Fe Institute Studies in the Sciences of Complexity all carry an imprint inspired by a Mimbres pottery design.

See also


External links


Santa Fe, New Mexico | Research institutes | Mathematical institutes | Complex systems | Management

Santa Fe Institute | Santa Fe Institute | サンタフェ研究所

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Santa Fe Institute".

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