Viviane Callier: Difference between revisions
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1. What topics do you have some expertise in and would you be willing | |||
to help others learn them? | |||
My background is in macroevolution and paleontology. In terms of technical skills I know a little about MatLab and Mathematica and would be happy to teach others what I know. | |||
2. What do you want to learn at the CSSS? | |||
How to translate a complicated problem into a mathematical framework that enables one to ask specific, tractable questions... How to apply mathematical models to study the etiology of complex systems -- what drives or causes evolutionary adaptations, diseases, and wars for example. | |||
3. Do you have any projects or research interests that would benefit | |||
from an interdisciplinary approach? | |||
I really like some ideas from Gregory Bateson's work in anthropology, psychology and evolutionary biology. So it's not so much that I have a specific project in mind that would benefit from an interdisciplinary approach, rather, my approach to seeing and understanding the world comes out of the interdisciplinary work of somebody else... | |||
4. Do you have any ideas for what sort of project you would like to do | |||
work on with other CSSS students this summer? | |||
Not sure. I recently came across some of L. F. Richardson's Mathematical Theory of War and am really fascinated by that work. so maybe something related to that. | |||
5. Suppose you could travel one-hundred years in the future and ask | |||
researchers any three questions. What would those questions be? | |||
What is consciousness? | |||
Have we come up with a better way of understanding and thinking about _causality_ in biology, in a way that can accommodate _minds_, and circular chains of causes? | |||
Can a more sophisticated biological understanding of causality help us solve human problems -- socio-economic and political problems, problems of cultivating natural resources without destroying them? |
Latest revision as of 19:28, 24 June 2008
1. What topics do you have some expertise in and would you be willing to help others learn them?
My background is in macroevolution and paleontology. In terms of technical skills I know a little about MatLab and Mathematica and would be happy to teach others what I know.
2. What do you want to learn at the CSSS?
How to translate a complicated problem into a mathematical framework that enables one to ask specific, tractable questions... How to apply mathematical models to study the etiology of complex systems -- what drives or causes evolutionary adaptations, diseases, and wars for example.
3. Do you have any projects or research interests that would benefit from an interdisciplinary approach? I really like some ideas from Gregory Bateson's work in anthropology, psychology and evolutionary biology. So it's not so much that I have a specific project in mind that would benefit from an interdisciplinary approach, rather, my approach to seeing and understanding the world comes out of the interdisciplinary work of somebody else...
4. Do you have any ideas for what sort of project you would like to do work on with other CSSS students this summer? Not sure. I recently came across some of L. F. Richardson's Mathematical Theory of War and am really fascinated by that work. so maybe something related to that.
5. Suppose you could travel one-hundred years in the future and ask researchers any three questions. What would those questions be?
What is consciousness?
Have we come up with a better way of understanding and thinking about _causality_ in biology, in a way that can accommodate _minds_, and circular chains of causes?
Can a more sophisticated biological understanding of causality help us solve human problems -- socio-economic and political problems, problems of cultivating natural resources without destroying them?