man·i·fes·to ˌma-nə-ˈfes-(ˌ)tō noun: - a written statement declaring publicly the intentions, motives, or views of its issuer.
ALL (63)
ARTISTIC (2)
Book Reviews (7)
BOOKS & CHAPTERS (9)
CD of CP (2)
COORDINATION DYNAMICS (6)
CP of CD (2)
CP~CD (1)
ESSAYS (2)
Featured Articles (7)
IN THE NEWS (2)
INSTITUTES (1)
JOURNAL ABSTRACTS (14)
LECTURE ABSTRACTS (6)
MEETINGS (5)
SCIENTIFIC (16)
SQUIGGLES (3)
SQUIGGLESPEAK (4)
TCN IS… (1)
TCN OF… (14)
The Coordination Dynamics Of… (13)
THE FOUR ASPECTS (14)
THE METASTABILIAN (1)
THE SQUIGGLE SENSE OF… (16)
THE SQUIGGLES OF… (3)
TSS Authors (1)
VIDEOCLIPS (1)
YIN~YANG (2)
WP Cumulus Flash tag cloud by Roy Tanck and Luke Morton requires Flash Player 9 or better.
(The people above have begun the quest to awaken their squiggle sense.
Even though everyone has a squiggle sense, most aren’t aware that they do.
Do you?)
Discover Your Squiggle Sense Today!
"I have to share that this is maybe my favourite book ever! ;-)
I put off reading it because I was a bit worried about whether it would have mathematical arguments beyond my capacity, but you’ve written in such an easy and engaging way that it’s like having a conversation with you in my living-room. Thanks so much for this book - all sorts of thoughts are spinning around in my brain as a result!"
—Dr. Karen Shue
"The Complementary Nature is a genuinely fascinating, provocative, and unique book. It rises to the challenge of describing how either/or thinking obscures the in-between dynamic realities that constitute life itself and in turn how these realities rest on complementary rather than oppositional pairs.
In the process, it breaks new ground and opens fresh terrain for future research by illuminating ways in which the science of coordination dynamics—from the study of brains to the study of behavior—offers new paths for understanding the nature of human nature."
—Dr. Maxine Sheets-Johnstone, author of The Primacy of Movement
"To date, Bohr's generalized complementarity principle has been no more than an epistemological stance with little to say to the scientist expressing a normal interest in predicting natural phenomena. In their book, Kelso and Engstrøm show how the principle can advance scientific prediction and, in turn, how science—especially the science of coordination—can develop the principle. Scientists and philosophers alike will find much to ponder and debate in the pages of this book, a book that I'm sure Niels Bohr would have found deeply satisfying."
—M. T. Turvey, Trustees' Distinguished Professor, University of Connecticut, and Senior Research Scientist, Haskins Laboratories
Discover Your Squiggle Sense Today!
