Buch, Englisch, 236 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm, Gewicht: 513 g
Buch, Englisch, 236 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm, Gewicht: 513 g
Reihe: History and Philosophy of Technoscience
ISBN: 978-1-138-06521-5
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
Using historical, comparative and interpretative case studies from a range of disciplines, with a particular emphasis on the case of plant studies, the author shows how and why computers, data treatment devices and programming languages have occasioned a gradual but irresistible and massive shift from mathematical models to computer simulations.
The Open Access version of this book, available at http://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons [Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND)] 4.0 license.
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Contents; List of figures;Acknowledgments;List of French abbreviations; Introduction; Chapter 1 – Geometric and botanic simulation; 1 The probabilistic simulation of branching biological shapes: Cohen (1966);2 The epistemic functions of modular programming, simulation and visualization;3 The first geometric and realistic simulation of trees (Honda-Fisher, 1971-1977);4 The limitations of morphometry and of thermodynamics of trees;5 The first geometric simulation of an actual tree: Terminalia;6 A recap of geometric simulation; Chapter 2: The logical model and algorithmic simulation of algae; 1 A botanist won over by logical positivism: the theory of lifecycles by A. Lindenmayer (1963-1965);2 Unusable set of axioms and used set of axioms;3 From logical theory to automata theory (1966-1967);4 The developmental model and the rules of rewriting (1968);5 The dispute with Brian Carey Goodwin regarding natural formalisms;6 Recap: the computer as automata model and deductive machine; Chapter 3: The limitations of biometric models and the transition to simulation in agronomy; 1 The institutional and technical context of the IFCC (1966-1971);2 Transferring a little bit of econometrics to biometrics: a problem of optimization (1974);3 The first application of plant simulation in agronomics (1974-1975);4 Fragmented modelling and geometric simulation: de Reffye (1975-1981);5 Simulation, imitation and the sub-symbolic use of formalisms; Chapter 4: A random and universal architectural simulation; 1 Making headway in botany: the notion of architectural model (1966-1978);2 The search for botanical realism (1978-1979);3 Criticisms of theoretical models;4 Criticisms of biometric models;5 A mixed reception (1979-1981); Chapter 5: Convergence between integrative simulation and computer graphics; 1 The relaunch of research into architectural simulation (1985-1991);2 Jaeger’s thesis: the prefixed model and synthesis of botanical images (1987);3 Blaise’s thesis: the simulation of buds parallelism (1991);4 How can an integrative simulation be validated?; Chapter 6: Convergence between universal simulation and forestry (1990-1998); 1 An epistemological dispute between modellers: INRA and CIRAD;2 Conceptual and institutional convergence: the CIRAD/INRA partner laboratory (1995);3 The empirical value of simulation;4 Supra-simulations; Chapter 7: The remathematization of simulations (from 1998 onwards); 1 The first mixed structure-function model: water efficiency (1997-1999);2 The parallel evolution of algorithmic simulation: 1984-1994;3 Simulating the individual plant in order to observe crop functioning (1997-2000);4 The association between AMAP and INRIA: sub-structures and factorization (1998-2006);5 Recap: pluriformalized simulation and convergence between disciplines; Chapter 8: Twenty-one functions of models and three types of simulations – Classifications and applications; 1 General function, main functions and specific functions of models;2 General characterization and classification of computer simulations;3 System simulation, model simulation, system-simulation model and model-simulation model;4 Applications to different plant models and plant simulations; Conclusion; Glossary;Selected Bibliography;Index of names;Index of subjects