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Author Buchanan, Mark.

Title The social atom : why the rich get richer, cheaters get caught, and your neighbor usually looks like you / Mark Buchanan.

Publication Info. New York : Bloomsbury : Distributed to the trade by Holtzbrinck Publishers, 2007.

Item Status

Location Call No. Status OPAC Message Public Note Gift Note
 Moore Stacks  HM866 .B83 2007    Available  ---
Edition 1st U.S. ed.
Description xii, 242 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 205-231) and index.
Contents Preface -- ch. 1. Think patterns, not people -- ch. 2. The "human" problem -- ch. 3. Our thinking instincts -- ch. 4. The adaptive atom -- ch. 5. The imitating atom -- ch. 6. The cooperative atom -- ch. 7. Together, apart -- ch. 8. Conspiracies and numbers -- ch. 9. Forward to the past -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Index.
Summary The idiosyncrasies of human decision-making have confounded economists and social theorists for years. If each person makes choices for personal (and often irrational) reasons, how can people's choices be predicted by a single theory? How can any economic, social, or political theory be valid? The truth is, none of them really are. This book makes the fascinating argument that the science of physics is beginning to provide a new picture of the human or "social atom," and help us understand the surprising, and often predictable, patterns that emerge when they get together. Look at patterns, not people, the author argues, and rules emerge that can explain how movements form, how interest groups operate, and even why ethnic hatred persists. Using similar observations, social physicists can predict whether neighborhoods will integrate, whether stock markets will crash, and whether crime waves will continue or abate. Brimming with mind games and provocative experiments, the book is an incisive, accessible, and comprehensive argument for a whole new way to look at human social behavior.
Subject Collective behavior.
Collective behavior.
Segregation.
Segregation.
Ethnic relations.
Ethnic relations.
ISBN 9781596910133
1596910135