W. Brian Arthur is an economist and complexity thinker. He is best known for his work on network effects locking markets in to the domination of a single player. He is also one of the pioneers of the science of complexity\u2014the science of how patterns and structures self-organize. He is a member of the Founders Society of the Santa Fe Institute and in 1988 ran its first research program. He has served on SFI's Science Board for 18 years and its Board of Trustees for 10 years, and is currently External Professor at SFI.
Arthur held the Morrison Chair of Economics and Population Studies at Stanford from 1983 to 1996. He has degrees in operations research, economics, mathematics, and electrical engineering. Arthur is a well-known keynote speaker.
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ResearchBrian Arthur is known for 3 main sets of ideas:
Increasing returns.\xa0In the 1980s Arthur developed a way for economics to understand how increasing returns or positive feedbacks (e.g. network effects) operate in the economy \u2014 in particular how they can magnify small, random events and act to lock in dominant players. This work has gone on to become important to our\xa0understanding of the high-tech economy.
Complexity economics.\xa0In the late 1980s, Arthur led a group at the Santa Fe Institute to develop an alternative approach to economics\u2014"complexity economics." Standard economics is based on the idea of super-rational actors operating in a static equilibrium world; complexity economics assumes actors in the economy do not necessarily face well-defined problems or use super-rationality. They explore, try to make sense, react and re-react to the outcomes they together create. The economy is not in stasis but always forming, always "discovering" fresh novelty. In this non-equilibrium view of the economy, bubbles and crashes can happen, markets can be "gamed" or exploited, and history and institutions matter.
How technology evolves.\xa0In 2009, Arthur published\xa0The Nature of Technology: What it Is and How it Evolves.\xa0The book argues that technology, like biological life, evolves from earlier forms. But the main mechanism isn't Darwin's, it is the combining of earlier technologies\u2014earlier forms. The book explores in detail how innovation works. And it argues that economy isn't just a container for its technologies; the economy emerges from its technologies.
AwardsArthur was awarded the inaugural\xa0Lagrange Prize in Complexity Science\xa0in 2008, and the\xa0Schumpeter Prize\xa0in Economics in 1990. He is a Guggenheim Fellow, 1987-88, Fellow of the Econometric Society, and IBM Faculty Fellow. He holds honorary doctorates from the National Univ. of Ireland (Galway) 2000, and Lancaster University (UK) 2009.
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Brian's Books\xa0
The Nature of Technology: What It Is and How It Evolves\xa0
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