Karlovitz Lecture Series 2015 with Dr. Geoffrey West

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Event Details
  • Date/Time:
    • Wednesday March 11, 2015 - Thursday March 12, 2015
      5:30 pm - 6:59 pm
  • Location: Clary Theater, Georgia Tech
  • Phone:
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  • Fee(s):
    N/A
  • Extras:
Contact
No contact information submitted.
Summaries

Summary Sentence: Dr. Geoffrey West will be giving his talk "Growth, Innovation, and the Accelerating Pace of Life from Cells and Ecosystems to Cities and Economies: Are They Sustainable?"

Full Summary:

The GT Honors Program and the College of Sciences welcomes Dr. Geoffrey West, from the Santa Fe Institute and Los Alamos National Laboratory as our Karlovitz Lecture speaker for 2015.  Dr. West will be presenting based on his research with the Santa Fe Institute which seeks to quantitatively describe the formation, characteristics and dynamics of cities as a human construct and how they follow laws that seemingly mirror organism. An abstract for this lecture can be seen below.

Abstract:

Why do all companies and people die whereas cities keep growing and life continues to accelerate? Why do we stop growing, live of order 100 years and sleep 8 hours a day? And how are these related to innovation, wealth creation, social networks, urbanisation and global sustainability? Cities are the prime source of crime, pollution, disease, global warming, and energy and resource consumption but are also the hubs of innovation, wealth creation and power. Despite being our greatest challenge, there is no integrated, quantitative, predictive science-based framework for understanding their dynamics, growth and organization. Ideas for such a unified theory, inspired by a network-based framework for understanding diverse properties of organisms (including metabolism, growth, mortality, cancer) will be discussed. Like organisms, many characteristics of cities worldwide, including wages, patents, diversity, crime, disease and infrastructure, scale systematically and predictably with size, suggesting universal principles underlying their dynamics that transcend history, geography and culture. This has dramatic implications for growth, development and long-term global sustainability. 

Additional Information

In Campus Calendar
No
Groups

Honors Program

Invited Audience
Public
Categories
Arts and Performance
Keywords
College of Sciences, GT honors program, karlovitz lecture, sustainability, urbanization
Status
  • Created By: Naiki Kaffezakis
  • Workflow Status: Published
  • Created On: Feb 16, 2015 - 11:25am
  • Last Updated: Oct 7, 2016 - 9:47pm