ABSTRACT

I’Ve live in an astornshingly complex world, Yet what we do in our everyday lives seems simple enough. Most of us conform to society’s rules, pursue familiar strategies, and achieve reasonably predictable outcomes. In our role as economic agents, we simply peddle our wares and earn our daily bread as best we can.So where on earth does this astonishing complexity come from? Much of it is ubiquitous in nature, to be sure, but part of it lies within and between us. Part of it comes from those games of interaction that humans play—games against nature, games against each other, games of competition, games of cooperation. In bygone eras, people simply hunted and gathered to come up with dinner. Today you can find theoretical economists scratching mysterious equations on whiteboards (not even blackboards) and getting paid to do this. In the modern economy, most of us make our living in a niche created for us by what others do. Because we’ve become more dependent on each other, our economy as a whole has become more strongly interactive.

chapter One|43 pages

Chance and Necessity

chapter Two|35 pages

On the Road to Know-Ware

chapter Three|35 pages

Sheep, Explorers, and Phase Transitions

chapter Four|22 pages

The Ancient Art of Learning by Circulating

chapter Five|37 pages

Networks, Boosters, and Self-Organized Cities

chapter Six|31 pages

Traffic Near the Edge of Chaos

chapter Seven|37 pages

Coevolving Markets

chapter Eight|22 pages

Artificial Economics