114
human consciousness, where instead of individual nerve cells or brain regions, a whole
new quality of existence and perception emerges.
Finally, in this chapter we would like to introduce five important representatives of
complex systems theory. We begin with Alan Turing, who thought in general terms about
the computer and its limits. This is followed by Rene Thom, who founded the general
theory about the behavior when crossing system boundaries. In addition, Benoit Mandelbrot
is introduced, who founded his own field with his fractals, to elucidate natural system
behavior and structures with simple principles, the fractals, as well as Leroy Hood, who is
an example as a highly recognized representative of the younger systems biology and its
application in medicine (there are many who could also be mentioned, not only in the
USA, but also from Europe. So he provides here only a strong example). Reinhart Heinrich
concludes the book, representing all non-US efforts in systems biology, which already
produced exciting initial results in the Soviet Union and the former GDR, for example on
phosphorylation cascades.
9.5
Pioneers of Systems Science
Alan Turing
Alan Turing has the merit (Hodges 2014) of having already mathematically thought out
what a computer would be capable of even before most computers were built. This makes
him at least one of the greatest computer scientists who ever lived. In his memory there has
been the “Turing Award” for the best computer scientist since 1966. Turing was English
and lived from June 1912 (London) to June 1954 (stigmatized for his homosexuality since
1952, died of a cyanide overdose, suicide/accident). With the help of the concept of the
Turing machine (Fig. 8.1) he was able to show clearly which problems computers and
formal systems can decide and which cannot (“On Computable Numbers, with an
Application to the Decision Problem”; 1936; Alonso Church’s lambda calculus showed
something similar earlier, but without this ingenious machine). In particular, it is impos
sible to decide algorithmically when a Turing machine holds. Of his many other contribu
tions to mathematics, logic and computers, it is worth mentioning that he deciphered the
code of the German cipher machine “Enigma” with the help of the first English large-scale
computer “Colossus” during the Second World War.
Rene Thom
Professor Rene Thom (02.09.1923–25.10.2002) was a mathematician. His “catastrophe
theory” attempts to describe specifically the discontinuous, erratic behavior of dynamical
systems (Poston and Stewart 1998). His theory studies the branching behavior of solutions
(bifurcations) as parameters vary as a mathematical treatment of chaos theory. His “theory
of singularities of differentiable mappings” means here the seven possibilities for mathe
matical functions to change suddenly and abruptly its seven “normal types”.
9 Complex Systems Behave Fundamentally in a Similar Way