Professor Stuart A. Kauffman
Stuart A.
Kauffman, M.D. is an American theoretical biologist and complex
systems researcher concerning the origin of life on Earth. He is best
known for arguing that the complexity of biological systems and
organisms might result as much from self-organization and
far-from-equilibrium dynamics as from Darwinian natural selection, as
well as for applying models of Boolean networks to simplified genetic
circuits.
Stu graduated from Dartmouth in 1960, earned his BA (Hons) at
Oxford University in 1963, and completed a medical degree (M.D.) at the
University of California, San Francisco in 1968. After completing his
residency in Emergency Medicine, he moved into developmental genetics of
the fruit fly, holding appointments first at the University of Chicago,
then at the University of Pennsylvania from 1975 to 1995, where he rose
to Professor of Biochemistry and Biophysics. He held a MacArthur
Fellowship, 1987–1992.
He rose to prominence through his association with the Santa Fe
Institute (a nonprofit research institute dedicated to the study of
complex systems), where he was faculty in residence from 1986 to 1997,
and through his work on models in various areas of biology. These
included autocatalytic sets in origin of life research, gene regulatory
networks in developmental biology, and fitness landscapes in
evolutionary biology. Stu holds the founding broad biotechnology
patents in combinatorial chemistry and applied molecular
evolution.
In 1996, Stu started BiosGroup, a Santa Fe, New Mexico-based
for-profit company that employed complex systems methodology to attempt
to solve business problems. BiosGroup was acquired by NuTech
Solutions in early 2003. NuTech was bought by Netezza in
2008.
From 2004 to 2009, he held a joint appointment at the University of
Calgary in Biological Sciences and Physics and Astronomy. He is also an
Adjunct Professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of
Calgary. He is an iCORE (Informatics Research Circle of Excellence)
chair and the director of the Institute for Biocomplexity and
Informatics.
In January 2009, Stu became a Finland Distinguished Professor
(FiDiPro) at Tampere University of Technology, Department of Signal
Processing. The appointment is until the end of 2012. The subject of the
FiDiPro research project is the development of delayed stochastic models
of genetic regulatory networks based on gene expression data at the
single molecule level.
In January 2010, he joined the University of Vermont faculty where
he will continue his work with UVM’s Complex Systems
Center.
Stu authored
Reinventing the Sacred: A New View of Science, Reason, and
Religion,
At Home in the Universe: The Search for the Laws of Self-Organization
and Complexity,
The Origins of Order: Self-Organization and Selection in
Evolution, and
Investigations, and provided the forward for
A Third Window: Natural Life beyond Newton and Darwin.
He holds patents
System and method for the synthesis of an economic web and the
identification of new market niches,
Method and system for operations management,
Methods and compositions for identifying nucleic acids containing cis
acting elements,
Automatic evolution of mixed analog and digital electronic circuits,
and
System and method for the analysis and prediction of economic
markets.
Watch
Professor Stuart Kauffman lectures at TUT, April 2010,
Stuart Kauffman on Beyond Reductionism,
Reinventing the Sacred with Stuart Kauffman
part 1 and
part 2, and
Beyond Belief: Enlightenment 2.0 – Stuart Kauffman.
Read
God enough:
We should see the ceaseless creativity of nature as sacred, argues
biologist Stuart Kauffman, despite what Richard Dawkins might
say and
Beyond Reductionism:
Reinventing The Sacred.