Charles H. Bennett
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B - Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics
The observed complexity of nature is often attributed to an intrinsic propensity of matter to self-organize under certain (e.g., dissipative) conditions. In order better to understand and test this vague thesis, we define complexity as "logical depth," a notion based on algorithmic information and computational time complexity. Informally, logical depth is the number of steps in the deductive or causal path connecting a thing with its plausible origin. We then assess the effects of dissipation, noise, and spatial and other symmetries of the initial conditions and equations of motion on the asymptotic complexity-generating abilities of statistical-mechanical model systems. We concentrate on discrete, spatially-homogeneous, locally-interacting systems such as kinetic Ising models and cellular automata. © 1986 Plenum Publishing Corporation.
Charles H. Bennett
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B - Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics
Charles H. Bennett
Quantum Information and Computation
Charles H. Bennett
Journal of Computational Physics
Charles H. Bennett, Gilles Brassard, et al.
ISIT 1994