Graeme Snooks

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Graeme Donald Snooks (born 1944 in Perth, Western Australia) is a systems theorist and stratologist who has developed a general dynamic theory to explain complex living systems.[1] His resulting "dynamic-strategy theory" has been employed to analyse the fluctuating fortunes of life over the past 4,000 million years (myrs) and of human society over the past 2 myrs; to analyse contemporary economic problems (inflation,[2] financial crises,[3] climate change [4]); to explore socio-political issues (population expansion, the emergence of democracy, the "clash of civilizations"); to analyse the emergence, operation, and malfunction of the mind; and to make scientific predictions about the future.[5] New discoveries emerging from Snooks' publications include: the logological constant (akin to the cosmological constant), the Snooks–Panov Vertical, and, most importantly, the strategic logos. His body of work challenges the existing paradigms of orthodox (neo-classical) economics, climate-mitigation economics, Marxism, neo-Darwinism, evolutionary psychology, self-organisation theory, and all other supply-side systems.

For twenty-one years, from 1989 to 2010, Graeme Snooks was the foundation Coghlan Research Professor of Economics in the Institute of Advanced Studies at the Australian National University. Currently he is the Executive Director of both the Institute of Global Dynamic Systems and IGDS Books[6] in Canberra. He was educated at Mount Lawley Senior High School (1957–1961), the University of Western Australia (BEc,1966; MEc, 1968), and the Australian National University (PhD, 1972). Professor Snooks has been elected Fellow of the Australian Academy of Social Sciences (1991), Fellow of the Royal Historical Society (UK) (1990), and Fellow of the Russian Academy of Humanities (2006).

Books and articles

Professor Snooks has published more than 20 books, including: Depression and Recovery (1974), Domesday Economy (with J. McDonald) (1986), Economics Without Time (1993), Historical Analysis in Economics (1993), Portrait of the Family within the Total Economy (1994), Was the Industrial Revolution Necessary?, (1994), The Dynamic Society (1996), The Ephemeral Civilization (1997), The Laws of History (1998), Longrun Dynamics (1998), Global Transition (1999), The Global Crisis Makers (2000), The Collapse of Darwinism (2003), The Selfcreating Mind (2006), The Coming Eclipse, or The Triumph of Climate Mitigation Over Solar Revolution (2010),[7] Dead God Rising. Religion and Science in the Universal Life-System (2010).,[8] and The Death of Zarathustra. Notes on Truth for the Risk-Taker (2011). Articles on the theory of complex living systems have been published by Snooks in Advances in Space Research (2005), Complexity (the journal of the Santa Fe Institute) (2008), and Social Evolution & History(2002, 2005, 2007). Currently he is completing Ark of the Sun, a book that reveals the underlying reality of life - the strategic logos - the ultimate complex living system. Graeme Snooks is also exploring complex interactions between the great realist philosophers of the past and present.

Further reading

See also

References

  1. http://econrsss.anu.edu.au/pdf/GDSC/WP001.pdf
  2. http://econrsss.anu.edu.au/pdf/GDSC/WP007.pdf
  3. http://econrsss.anu.edu.au/pdf/GDSC/WP010.pdf
  4. http://econrsss.anu.edu.au/pdf/GDSC/WP010.pdf
  5. http://econrsss.anu.edu.au/GDSCpapers.htm
  6. http://caligula.anu.edu.au/~snooksweb/
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