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Scale: The Universal Laws of Growth, Innovation, Sustainability, and the Pace of Life in Organisms, Cities, Economies, and Companies Hardcover – May 16, 2017

4.5 out of 5 stars 1,312 ratings

"This is science writing as wonder and as inspiration." —The Wall Street Journal

Wall Street Journal

From one of the most influential scientists of our time, a dazzling exploration of the hidden laws that govern the life cycle of everything from plants and animals to the cities we live in.


Visionary physicist Geoffrey West is a pioneer in the field of complexity science, the science of emergent systems and networks. The term “complexity” can be misleading, however, because what makes West’s discoveries so beautiful is that he has found an underlying simplicity that unites the seemingly complex and diverse phenomena of living systems, including our bodies, our cities and our businesses.

Fascinated by aging and mortality, West applied the rigor of a physicist to the biological question of why we live as long as we do and no longer. The result was astonishing, and changed science: West found that despite the riotous diversity in mammals, they are all, to a large degree, scaled versions of each other. If you know the size of a mammal, you can use scaling laws to learn everything from how much food it eats per day, what its heart-rate is, how long it will take to mature, its lifespan, and so on. Furthermore, the efficiency of the mammal’s circulatory systems scales up precisely based on weight: if you compare a mouse, a human and an elephant on a logarithmic graph, you find with every doubling of average weight, a species gets 25% more efficient—and lives 25% longer. Fundamentally, he has proven, the issue has to do with the fractal geometry of the networks that supply energy and remove waste from the organism’s body.

West’s work has been game-changing for biologists, but then he made the even bolder move of exploring his work’s applicability. Cities, too, are constellations of networks and laws of scalability relate with eerie precision to them. Recently, West has applied his revolutionary work to the business world. This investigation has led to powerful insights into why some companies thrive while others fail. The implications of these discoveries are far-reaching, and are just beginning to be explored.
Scale is a thrilling scientific adventure story about the elemental natural laws that bind us together in simple but profound ways. Through the brilliant mind of Geoffrey West, we can envision how cities, companies and biological life alike are dancing to the same simple, powerful tune.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

“An enchanting intellectual odyssey…also a satisfying personal and professional memoir of a distinguished scientist whose life’s work came to be preoccupied with finding ways to break down traditional boundaries between disciplines to solve the long-term global challenges of sustainability…. Mr. West manages to deliver a lot of theory and history accessibly and entertainingly… Provocative and fascinating.”The New York Times

“Scale
, a grand synthesis of topics [Geoffrey West] has studied for several decades, makes an important and eloquent case for the significance [of universal laws of size and growth] in an ecology of the natural and human world — and in understanding whether the two can fit together.” —Nature

“West’s insightful analysis and astute observations patiently build an intellectual framework that is ultimately highly rewarding, offering a new perspective on the many scales with which nature and society challenge us…A fascinating journey.”Science Magazine

"This is the sort of big-ideas book that comes along only every few years, the kind that changes the conversation in boardroom, common room and dining room....A book full of thrilling ideas."
The Sunday Times (London)

“From a dean of complexity theory comes a sharp consideration of the pace and pattern of life in a universe of "complex adaptive systems” …West's book is a succession of charts, graphs, and aha moments, all deeply learned but lightly worn. By the end of the book, readers will understand such oddments as why it is that the hearts of all animals, from mouse to elephant, beat roughly the same number of times across a lifespan and why the pace of life increases so markedly as the population grows (which explains why people walk faster, it turns out, in big cities than out in the countryside) …Illuminating and entertaining—heady science written for a lay readership, bringing scaling theory and kindred ideas to a large audience.”—
Kirkus Reviews 

"I can think of no more exciting thinker in the world today than Geoffrey West. By bringing a physicist's razor-sharp mind to wonderfully surprising questions -- 'Why Aren’t There Mammals the Size of Tiny Ants?' or 'Are Cities and Companies Just Very Large Organisms?' -- West forces us to see everything anew, from our own bodies to the mega-cities our species increasingly chooses to inhabit.
Scale is a firework display of popular science." 
—Niall Ferguson, senior fellow, the Hoover Institution

“This spectacular book on how logarithmic scaling governs everything is packed with news—from the self-similar dynamics of cells and ecosystems to exactly why companies always die and cities don’t. I dog-eared and marked up damn near every page.”
Stewart Brand, creator of the Whole Earth Catalog
 

“Geoffrey West's 
Scale is filled with brilliant insights. He illuminates the laws of nature underlying everything from tiny organisms and humans to cities and companies, and provides a quantitative framework for decoding the deep complexity of our interconnected world. If you want to know why companies fail, how cities persist and what is needed to sustain our civilization in this era of rapid innovation, read this amazing book.”
Marc Benioff, CEO of Salesforce
 

“When Geoffrey West, a brilliant theoretical physicist, turned his lens to the study of life spans, biological systems or cities he stumbled onto a game-changing universal insight about growth and sustainability. 
Scale is dazzling and provocative and West proves himself to be a compelling and entertaining writer—this is a book we will be talking about for a long time.”
Abraham Verghese, author of Cutting for Stone
 

“If there were a Nobel Prize for transdisciplinary science Geoffrey West would have won it for the work covered in 
Scale. This is a book of great originality and deep importance, containing startling insights about topics as seemingly unrelated as aging and death, sleep, metabolism, cities, energy use, creativity, corporations, and even the sustainability of our existence.  If you are curious about how the world really works, you must read this book.”
Bill Miller, Chairman, Emeritus, Sante Fe Institute
 

“Geoffrey West’s 
Scale is a revelation. Based on his path breaking theory and research on super-linear scaling, it provides powerful new insights into the basic scientific laws that power our modern society and economy, its startup companies, large corporations and cities.  The book is a must read for CEOs, technologists, mayors, urban leaders and anyone who wants to understand the simple laws that shape the complex, self-organizing world in which we live.”
Richard Florida, author of The Rise of the Creative Class

“This is an important and original book, of immense scope. Geoffrey West is a polymath, whose insights range over physics, biology and the social sciences. He shows that the sizes, shapes and lifetimes of living things - despite their amazing diversity -- display surprising correlations and patterns, and that these follow from basic physical principles. He then discovers, more surprisingly, the emergence of similar 'scaling laws' in human societies - in our cities, companies and social networks. These findings are presented in clear non-technical prose, enlivened by anecdotes which convey how these concepts arose, and thoughtful assessment of why they're important for those planning our future. This fascinating book deserves very wide readership.”
 
—Martin Rees, Astronomer Royal and author of 
Just Six Numbers

“Each human should learn to read and write, to count, and for those who know how to count, scalability. Scaling is the most important yet most hidden and rarely discussed attribute—without understanding it one cannot possibly understand the world. This book will expand your thinking from three dimensions to four. Get two copies, just in case you lose one.” 
—Nassim Nicholas Taleb, author of the Incerto

“An absolutely riveting read. Like the best detective story, West lays out the amazing challenge of understanding why animals, cities and companies all scale so uniformly and then skillfully lets us into the secrets that his detective work has uncovered. This book captures the spirit of science in the 21st century, revealing the deep connections not just across physics and biology but society and life. The book is a perfect balance between the big scientific story and West’s own personal narrative. We accompany the author on his quest to face up to his own mortality while at the same time being exposed to the theoretical discoveries that West has pioneered in his groundbreaking work.”
 
—Marcus du Sautoy, Simonyi Professor for the Public Understanding of Science at Oxford University and author of
The Great Unknown
 
“It’s rare in the history of science that someone has a big, bold, beautiful, stunningly simple new idea that also turns out to be right. Geoffrey West had one. And
Scale is its story.”
—Steven Strogatz, Professor of Mathematics at Cornell University and  author of The Joy of X

About the Author

Geoffrey West is a theoretical physicist whose primary interests have been in fundamental questions in physics and biology. West is a Senior Fellow at Los Alamos National Laboratory and a distinguished professor at the Sante Fe Institute, where he served as the president from 2005-2009.In 2006 he was named to Time’s list of “The 100 Most Influential People in the World.”

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Penguin Press; First Edition (May 16, 2017)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 496 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1594205582
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1594205583
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.66 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.44 x 1.48 x 9.56 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 out of 5 stars 1,312 ratings

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4.5 out of 5 stars
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Customers find the book interesting and well-written, appreciating its quantitative approach to biology and numerous insights. The book receives positive feedback for its innovative content, with one customer noting its incredible fusion of ideas from multiple disciplines. However, several customers mention that the book is repetitive.

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94 customers mention "Readability"75 positive19 negative

Customers find the book very interesting and impressive, describing it as an important and insightful read that spurs new ideas.

"...the emerging science of cities and city life, what makes them good, interesting, and viable; but he also speaks to how cities can drown in their own..." Read more

"He makes a very interesting case for scaling "laws" underlying organisms, cities, and companies (the company insights are absolutely fascinating)...." Read more

"...in fact, subject to similar generic laws." That is why the book is so impressive and that's why you need time to digest all this information..." Read more

"...Overall, this was a very enjoyable book and a worthwhile read for anyone interested in the growing economies and challenges facing us as we head..." Read more

45 customers mention "Insight"41 positive4 negative

Customers appreciate the book's insights, particularly its interesting quantitative approach to biology and thorough research. One customer notes how it promotes further transdisciplinary study of complex systems.

"...and understandings of the biological sciences, biochemistry, and physiology in ways that show that there appear to be what might be called the ‘Laws..." Read more

"...(the company insights are absolutely fascinating)...." Read more

"...And the journey (the book is a fascinating one) is full of little details and several perspectives that are being added one by one up to the final..." Read more

"...Dr. West provides interesting tidbits of knowledge regarding similar energy consumption among humans and other organisms, as he puts it, from the..." Read more

8 customers mention "Innovation"8 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's innovative approach, with one noting its incredible fusion of ideas from multiple disciplines.

"Geoffrey West’s book Scale: The Universal Laws of Growth, Innovation, Sustainability, and the Pace of Life in Organisms, Cities, Economies, And..." Read more

"Full of intriguing, big ideas but amazingly sloppy both in details and exposition, especially considering the author is a theoretical physicist...." Read more

"Super interesting concepts. It is kind of a hard read, it definitely feels like a theoretical physicist wrote it...." Read more

"...many such areas and confirms that we must major decisions, support innovation and think with a fervor about the big picture or Que Cera." Read more

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"...a bit repetitive at the end. Overall, a great read that I would recommend." Read more

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"...On one hand, I find the author too repetitive and could convey his message with half the words...." Read more

"Very repetitive and did not fulfill my expectations...." Read more

The unexpected order of everything.
5 out of 5 stars
The unexpected order of everything.
In three words, excellent, necessary, and inspiring. Scale is about order where we see just chaos. It should be read together with Sync: How Order Emerges From Chaos In the Universe, Nature, and Daily Life. You should try this one first. By the way, Geoffrey West has a Ted conference on the topic that I saw, in fact, before reading the book. But, as is customary, the book is superior, even necessary because it expands in every direction the topics he touches at the conference room. I would say that the conference is more focus in the theme of cities as organisms. The book is the path you have to follow before arriving there. And the journey (the book is a fascinating one) is full of little details and several perspectives that are being added one by one up to the final chapter, where you see the whole picture. But before getting there, the book has to answer several questions. The main one is enunciated at the very beginning (page 7): "How do we ensure that our human-engineered systems evolved only over the past ten thousand years, can continue to coexist with the natural biological world, which evolved over billions of years?" And even more important: "Can we maintain a vibrant, innovative society driven by ideas and wealth creation, or are we destined to become a planet of slums, conflict, and devastation?" Full of examples and ideas, the work makes you look for yourself, to review some videos, articles, papers, and, as always, some other books. In fact, inspired by Scale I bought also The Death and Life of Great American Cities by Jane Jacobs. A classic. This is a Santa Fe Institute hot topic so this is more than mere academia, is surfing on top of wave. The book was published this year and my hunch is that it will continue to be present for several more. The search for "universal laws of growth, innovation, sustainability, and the pace of life in organisms, cities, and companies," is just beginning. The math is the same as usual but today we have computer simulation, and we can do experiments in a scale never imagined before. If you are interested in how the world works in a big scale, this is the book. Every week or so a million people leave the countryside to the city. Yes, every week. Can you imagine? All those huge nodes, connected to each other are configuring a net so vast and thick, that we need something more than just keeping accounts. Here enters scale, showing that size matters, and every single species occupies a unique niche according its scale --including us, of course. So, if the scale, which means the position of an organism or a super-organism (as cities) with respect, for instance, to the consumption of energy, represents an order, well, we are facing the possibility of finding a law or laws that tell us how this works, what we can expect for the future, what we should see when reviewing the past, an so on. The point is "that the dynamics, growth, and organization of animal, plants, human social behavior, cities, and companies are, in fact, subject to similar generic laws." That is why the book is so impressive and that's why you need time to digest all this information page by page. It takes a week to read it, but after that it will always be with you. You won't forget it because it changes the way you see the city, your city. And in so doing is leaving behind all those crazy ideas that try to explain through rhetorical means why the cities are so big and why they fail (like Santiago de Chile, during the last winter when it ran out of electricity). Well, a deserved and permanent five stars book.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on July 1, 2019
    Geoffrey West’s book Scale: The Universal Laws of Growth, Innovation, Sustainability, and the Pace of Life in Organisms, Cities, Economies, And Companies (Penguin Press (New York), 2017, is a wide-ranging survey about the way in which scale and scalability affects every life form and activity, including civilization and its human institutions here on earth. This is a profoundly important book, in that it brings together fundamental knowledge and understandings of the biological sciences, biochemistry, and physiology in ways that show that there appear to be what might be called the ‘Laws of Life’ might be hypothesized and generalized as traits and characteristics that all life forms share in common regarding commonalities and replications of patterns, their respective strengths, stabilities, and lengths of time that they may be expected to remain alive and retain viability.

    These matters have occupied the thoughts and explorations of philosophers since the days of ancient Greece when schools of philosophical thought first became systematized and written down. In many respects, the Platonic model, consisting of idealized prototypes to which they are real-world exemplars emulated poorly, was a step or two along the right path, but not in the way that anyone would readily recognize, because Platonic thinkers utilize the mathematics of geometry to express their ideas. It would take humankind an additional 2500 years in order to arrive at understandings about the ultimate nature of reality, not in terms of circles, squares, and triangles, as believed by the ancient Greeks; but rather as stochastic processes that are now believed to govern the known universe itself. It is not the Platonic ideals as to form whose characteristics are now being studied; instead, it is the operation of evolution itself, achieved through random processes that apply to all living things, and that the atoms, molecules, and organic tissues themselves that are developed over time within a myriad of species share common characteristics as to their strengths, their replicabilities, and their scalabilities that allow them to remain viable, and to reproduce their respective species. This concept of scalability as a limiting factor West shows as apply across the board, from the simplest unicellular life forms to the largest animals capable of independent locomotion and survival here on earth.

    Geoffrey West is a theoretical physicist who has taught at major universities around the world, among them Oxford University, Imperial College, London, and elsewhere in the world. He is also a Distinguished Professor and former president of the Santa Fe Institute.

    He has also conducted pioneering research into the nature of complex systems, and what might be expected to occur when those systems reach beyond the cycles of natural growth that they would otherwise have without the intervention of innovative technologies that allow those systems to expand beyond their natural limitations. His treatise is a tour de force about how these earthly life forms develop and expand from there simplest roots to the complexities that we face every day. More importantly, scaling itself allows him to explore the nature of complexity; the concept of emergence, self-organization, biological networks, and resilience. He addresses matters of ecological and environmental sustainability; innovation and what he refers to as ‘Cycles of Singularities’.

    West talks about the institutions of human life, from the simple to the most complex; how cities and urbanization closely resemble diverse colonies of protozoa; the nature of exponentiality and so-called ‘power laws’, and why that is important, as increasing size is also a hallmark of inherent weakness in individuals, in species, and in human-made societies, economies, and institutions. He speaks about the emerging science of cities and city life, what makes them good, interesting, and viable; but he also speaks to how cities can drown in their own complexities.

    He also talks about something called fractal geometry, and how the complex patterns on which fractal mathematics is based is widely applicable to a wide range of subject matter, from computer graphic interfaces and motion pictures, to explaining cardiac arrhythmia, to music and artwork, to simulations of weather and earthquakes, and to explain volatility in the stock market. The important thing to remember about scale is that it magnifies both what is known, and what is unknown; and it is in that realm that magnification multiplies disruptive effects. In seismology, we all know about the Richter Scale, in which the effects of earthquakes are magnified exponentially with each incremental increase of force on the scale magnified by a power of 10. The higher the number, the much more powerful they become, causing their disruptive effects to propagate over a much wider area. The Richter scale is illustrative of what is known as a power law, meaning that on a logarithmic scale, the strength of the effect increases according to the size of the exponent that acts as a multiplier of lower numbered effects. At the same time, those exponentially larger effects are less commonly seen, and by virtue of their absence from consciousness, people lose awareness of the potential for incalculable damage once those effects become manifest. Along with heightened impact come interactions with other aspects of the environment that might not be noticeable. For example, the great Alaskan earthquake of 1964 exceeded 9 points on the Richter scale, but it was the tsunami that followed that wiped out coastal towns and villages. So, scale matters, even if one of the more significant dangers is our collective forgetfulness that these events occur; and they do occur more frequently than we would like to imagine.

    West concludes by considering about an emerging science of commercial entities, i.e., companies: their various complexities and more limited abilities to remain sustainable over time.

    As an interconnected body of knowledge in which groundwork findings in biology are shown to have relevance to larger matters about the way society operates, West’s book is essentially a work in progress. Social science, including economics, psychology, and politics (including law) are still far behind their physical science brethren in making the proper connections, and in arriving at the appropriate conclusions. Nevertheless, the fundamental understandings are there for study and contemplation. Sometimes, it is more than enough that a pioneering researcher or philosopher simply points the way forward for others to follow. That is perhaps the ultimate value of Geoffrey West’s magnificent book: acute observations provoke serious inquiry lead to further observations and explanatory hypotheses.

    Science is always a work in progress; and what we claim to know today can become subsumed in a larger body of knowledge that is now accumulating. West acknowledges that there are natural limits to what living metabolism can do to keep an organism alive, even if that organism is the beneficiary of natural selection. He invokes the Second Law of Thermodynamics to suggest that entropy places an upper limit on the amount of energy in living things that can be turned to productive use. When a process reaches equilibrium in a closed system, the process itself may cease to continue; and whether it is described as an accumulation of disorder, or tagged with a pejorative appellation such as ‘useless energy’, the idea encompasses a physiochemical process beyond which its constituent parts cannot process further. The concept of wisdom implicitly acknowledges that lives are finite, that at some point things come to an end, and in the end, the preferred course of action is to make the best use of the time and resources we have available to us. To that end, an ungovernable sense of unrestrained scalability may cause us to throw away whatever potential for good or betterment that we can reasonably expect to have left to us over our remaining lifespans. In this respect, Geoffrey West may be considered something of a stoical philosopher. And that is yet another excellent reason to acquire and read his book. Highly recommended!
    12 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on July 15, 2023
    He makes a very interesting case for scaling "laws" underlying organisms, cities, and companies (the company insights are absolutely fascinating). He also does a very good job of once over lightly for the math stuff.

    But he, like a lot of non-biologists who go into biology stuff, misses the point (for those who might be upset, I have degrees in Zoology and Genetics). Yes, the math shows that organisms grow and die, but does not prove or show that it is necessary for that to happen. Just because junk piles up over time doesn't mean that the laws of the universe require it to be that way. All he has done is "describe" what happens, not "explain" why, and therefore offers no insight into how to prevent it.

    And he uses up his last chapter and a postscript trying to justify huge expenditures in academic research to create an overarching Theory of Everything without pointing out what, if any, possible value that might provide. We already know that sustainability is a complex problem, but we also know that there are simple solutions available to us now, without mountains of research. For example, China showed one simple solution (only available, of course, to such a rigid authoritarian regime) with its One Child Policy.

    Finally, he turns everything into Lake Wobegone (where everyone is "above average") by making people and institutions appear to be more than they are though using qualifiers like "prestigious," "well-known," etc., as if he moves in select circles of only those few who can save the world.
    15 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on October 22, 2017
    In three words, excellent, necessary, and inspiring.

    Scale is about order where we see just chaos. It should be read together with Sync: How Order Emerges From Chaos In the Universe, Nature, and Daily Life. You should try this one first.

    By the way, Geoffrey West has a Ted conference on the topic that I saw, in fact, before reading the book. But, as is customary, the book is superior, even necessary because it expands in every direction the topics he touches at the conference room. I would say that the conference is more focus in the theme of cities as organisms. The book is the path you have to follow before arriving there. And the journey (the book is a fascinating one) is full of little details and several perspectives that are being added one by one up to the final chapter, where you see the whole picture.

    But before getting there, the book has to answer several questions. The main one is enunciated at the very beginning (page 7): "How do we ensure that our human-engineered systems evolved only over the past ten thousand years, can continue to coexist with the natural biological world, which evolved over billions of years?" And even more important: "Can we maintain a vibrant, innovative society driven by ideas and wealth creation, or are we destined to become a planet of slums, conflict, and devastation?"

    Full of examples and ideas, the work makes you look for yourself, to review some videos, articles, papers, and, as always, some other books. In fact, inspired by Scale I bought also The Death and Life of Great American Cities by Jane Jacobs. A classic.

    This is a Santa Fe Institute hot topic so this is more than mere academia, is surfing on top of wave. The book was published this year and my hunch is that it will continue to be present for several more. The search for "universal laws of growth, innovation, sustainability, and the pace of life in organisms, cities, and companies," is just beginning. The math is the same as usual but today we have computer simulation, and we can do experiments in a scale never imagined before.

    If you are interested in how the world works in a big scale, this is the book. Every week or so a million people leave the countryside to the city. Yes, every week. Can you imagine? All those huge nodes, connected to each other are configuring a net so vast and thick, that we need something more than just keeping accounts. Here enters scale, showing that size matters, and every single species occupies a unique niche according its scale --including us, of course. So, if the scale, which means the position of an organism or a super-organism (as cities) with respect, for instance, to the consumption of energy, represents an order, well, we are facing the possibility of finding a law or laws that tell us how this works, what we can expect for the future, what we should see when reviewing the past, an so on. The point is "that the dynamics, growth, and organization of animal, plants, human social behavior, cities, and companies are, in fact, subject to similar generic laws." That is why the book is so impressive and that's why you need time to digest all this information page by page.

    It takes a week to read it, but after that it will always be with you. You won't forget it because it changes the way you see the city, your city. And in so doing is leaving behind all those crazy ideas that try to explain through rhetorical means why the cities are so big and why they fail (like Santiago de Chile, during the last winter when it ran out of electricity).

    Well, a deserved and permanent five stars book.
    Customer image
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    The unexpected order of everything.

    Reviewed in the United States on October 22, 2017
    In three words, excellent, necessary, and inspiring.

    Scale is about order where we see just chaos. It should be read together with Sync: How Order Emerges From Chaos In the Universe, Nature, and Daily Life. You should try this one first.

    By the way, Geoffrey West has a Ted conference on the topic that I saw, in fact, before reading the book. But, as is customary, the book is superior, even necessary because it expands in every direction the topics he touches at the conference room. I would say that the conference is more focus in the theme of cities as organisms. The book is the path you have to follow before arriving there. And the journey (the book is a fascinating one) is full of little details and several perspectives that are being added one by one up to the final chapter, where you see the whole picture.

    But before getting there, the book has to answer several questions. The main one is enunciated at the very beginning (page 7): "How do we ensure that our human-engineered systems evolved only over the past ten thousand years, can continue to coexist with the natural biological world, which evolved over billions of years?" And even more important: "Can we maintain a vibrant, innovative society driven by ideas and wealth creation, or are we destined to become a planet of slums, conflict, and devastation?"

    Full of examples and ideas, the work makes you look for yourself, to review some videos, articles, papers, and, as always, some other books. In fact, inspired by Scale I bought also The Death and Life of Great American Cities by Jane Jacobs. A classic.

    This is a Santa Fe Institute hot topic so this is more than mere academia, is surfing on top of wave. The book was published this year and my hunch is that it will continue to be present for several more. The search for "universal laws of growth, innovation, sustainability, and the pace of life in organisms, cities, and companies," is just beginning. The math is the same as usual but today we have computer simulation, and we can do experiments in a scale never imagined before.

    If you are interested in how the world works in a big scale, this is the book. Every week or so a million people leave the countryside to the city. Yes, every week. Can you imagine? All those huge nodes, connected to each other are configuring a net so vast and thick, that we need something more than just keeping accounts. Here enters scale, showing that size matters, and every single species occupies a unique niche according its scale --including us, of course. So, if the scale, which means the position of an organism or a super-organism (as cities) with respect, for instance, to the consumption of energy, represents an order, well, we are facing the possibility of finding a law or laws that tell us how this works, what we can expect for the future, what we should see when reviewing the past, an so on. The point is "that the dynamics, growth, and organization of animal, plants, human social behavior, cities, and companies are, in fact, subject to similar generic laws." That is why the book is so impressive and that's why you need time to digest all this information page by page.

    It takes a week to read it, but after that it will always be with you. You won't forget it because it changes the way you see the city, your city. And in so doing is leaving behind all those crazy ideas that try to explain through rhetorical means why the cities are so big and why they fail (like Santiago de Chile, during the last winter when it ran out of electricity).

    Well, a deserved and permanent five stars book.
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    31 people found this helpful
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  • SBn
    5.0 out of 5 stars Ein bahnbrechendes Buch mit reellen Beitrag zur fundierten Umweltdiskussion
    Reviewed in Germany on June 11, 2018
    Alle 10 Jahre gibt es ein Buch, welches mit grossem, neuen und relevanten Inhalt etwas fundiertes zu einer existiernden Diskussion beiträgt. Dieses Buch ist so eins....ohne Zweifel, eins der besten Bücher, die ich je gelesen habe. Anstatt das übliche emotionelle Gelaber über die Umweltthematik zu wiederkauen, kommt Geoffrey West seltsameweise zu den gleichen Schlüssen - aber diesmal mit mathematischen, fundierten Schlüssen. (Die benötigte Mathe ist nicht schwieriger, als die von der 10. Klasse). Absolut fazinierend und umwerfend ! Beginnend mit den von ihm endeckten Skaleneffektregeln bei Lebewesen (sehr interessant !) zeigt er wie Firmen, Städte und Gesellschaften auch an sich "Lebewesen" sind und was die logische Konsequenzen für die Umweltproblematik sind, und welche Lösungen möglich sind - vor allem in Bezug auf die Machbarkeit uns aus diesem Problem "heraus zu innovieren". Abosolute maximale Empfehlung...wenn ich 6 Sterne vergeben könnte, würde ich es tun
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  • panzerig
    5.0 out of 5 stars It's a long way to discover the secret laws of life!
    Reviewed in Italy on December 13, 2017
    A fascinating book both for style and content connected to a great author. The best way to explain the difference between who searches for easy correlations in order to get easy successes and who examines in depth in order to search the causation; this last one is the only way to seize the very change, to spread the #innovation and eventually move from people to #smartpeople, from city to #smartcity!
  • RGH
    5.0 out of 5 stars MENTION BIEN
    Reviewed in France on August 26, 2017
    Livre tout à fait passionnant offrant une vision réellement originale sur la structure du monde. Je recommande cette lecture à tous les curieux des visions rationnelles et nouvelles de ce chercheur.
  • Ach
    5.0 out of 5 stars Uitmuntend!!
    Reviewed in the Netherlands on June 13, 2017
    Heerlijk, zo'n boek dat een samenhangend beeld geeft van zeer diverse verschijnselen. Diepgaand, en mooi geschreven zonder de techniek in te duiken, plus anekdotisch, een wijs boek.
  • s.j.
    5.0 out of 5 stars Truly multidisciplinary and a very interesting book.
    Reviewed in India on November 20, 2019
    Very interesting book. Multidisciplinary, informative and integrates scaling laws across many disciplines -biology, physics, geography, business, innovation, sociology, structures, networks, systems. Highly recommended.