The deep roots of economic inequality
A special issue of Science explores the origins of human inequality, drawing on research by SFI Professor Sam Bowles and collaborators.
The latest news and events at the Santa Fe Institute
A special issue of Science explores the origins of human inequality, drawing on research by SFI Professor Sam Bowles and collaborators.
Banks can be a lot like poorly designed plumbing, according to a working paper by two SFI External Professors that asks how banking systems might be designed to minimize inter-industry shocks.
In an SFI Community Lecture Wednesday, May 14, in Santa Fe, philosopher Daniel Dennett asked: if free will is an illusion, should we conclude that we don’t need real free will to be responsible for our actions? Watch the video.
A workshop this week at SFI asks how well web-based disease trackers like Google Flu Trends actually work, and seeks ways they can be made to work better.
In an op-ed in PNAS, Martin Scheffer calls on scientists to reform the practice of science to reinforce the associative side of thinking, citing SFI as a model institution in this regard.
Mathematician Nihat Ay will join SFI’s resident faculty beginning next summer, SFI Chair of Faculty and VP for Science Jennifer Dunne announced today.
Nearly 30 years ago Seth Lloyd sought to explain the apparent directionality of time, or "time's arrow," as the increasing entanglement of particles. This year, two research teams have added strength to the then-dismisssed idea.
A recent analysis of health-related Google searches finds that searches for health topics are far more frequent at the beginning of the week than later in the week -- a recurring pattern that might help devise strategies for improved public health.
SFI External Professor Sabre Kais has edited a new book that examines the intersection of quantum information and chemical physics.
An archaeological site in Peru features mounds and linear geoglyphs likely used to mark the summer solstice and other cultural activities in an ancient society, according to a study co-authored by SFI External Professor Charles Stanish.
The Santa Fe Institute is seeking an uncommon leader to guide this world-renowned nonprofit research and education center. If you know a great candidate, pass it on.
In a column in Green Money, SFI Trustee Katherine Collins asks "What would nature do?" and explores how that question can inform decisions about investing.
SFI's Sam Bowles and Herb Gintis were among the "young radical economists" at Harvard in the late 1960s whose skepticism about the mainstream paradigm has since gained credibility, according to a feature in Adbusters magazine.
Monitoring the populations of “uncontacted” tribes via Google Earth is a noninvasive way to help improve the chances of survival of indigenous human groups, according to a paper co-authored by SFI's Marcus Hamilton.
SFI Science Board member Montgomery Slatkin is among 84 new members of the National Academy of Sciences, the NAS announced today.
Cities are the greenest possible way to live together, and perhaps the only way we can mitigate climate change, according to The Guardian's Leo Hollis, who cites SFI cities & urbanization research.
Richard Florida, senior editor at The Atlantic, posits 11 reasons the United Nations should make cities the focus of its sustainable development goals. His evidence includes SFI research results.
In a two-part article marking the 20th anniversary of Shor's algorithm, writer Tom Sigfriend recalls an SFI meeting in 1994 that he says "captured the thoughts of the best quantum thinkers at a key time in quantum history."
SFI's Simon DeDeo explores the quantitative analysis of historical data as an emerging way to study human history, describing his study of 150 years of court transcripts from London's Old Bailey.
Cancerous tumors may be poised at the edge of their own destruction, an insight that could help researchers find new, more effective treatments, suggest SFI External Professor Ricard Solé and colleagues in a recent paper.