
a book
Out of Control: The New Biology of Machines, Social Systems, & the Economic World
Kevin Kelly · 1995 · 521 pages
This is a book about how our manufactured world has become so complex that the only way to create yet more complex things is by using the principles of biology. This means decentralized, bottom up control, evolutionary advances and error-honoring institutions. I also get into the new laws of wealth in a network-based economy, what the Biosphere 2 project in Arizona has or has not to teach us, and whether large systems can predict or be predicted. And more: restoration biology, encryption, a-life, and the lessons of hypertext. Yes, it's a romp, in 520 pages. But the best part, my friends tell me, is the 28-page annotated bibliography. If you have suspected that technology could be better, more life-like, then this book is for you. -- Product Description.
recommended by 5 people
sourced from public statements

Steve Jurvetson
“The single book that’s had the most influence on me my entire life. It started my life long fascination of the biological metaphors in technology.”↗



