Emergence and Decline of Scientific Paradigms
Abstract
Scientific paradigms have a tendency to rise fast and decline slowly. This asymmetry reflects the difficulty in developing a truly original idea, compared to the ease at which a concept can be eroded by numerous modifications. Here we formulate a model for the emergence and spread of ideas which deals with this asymmetry by constraining the ability of agents to return to already abandoned concepts. The model exhibits a fairly regular pattern of global paradigm shifts, where older paradigms are eroded and subsequently replaced by new ones. The model sets the theme for a new class of pattern formation models, where local dynamics breaks the detailed balance in a way that prevents old states from defending themselves against new nucleating or invading states. The model allows for frozen events in terms of the coexistence of multiple metastable states.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review Letters
- Pub Date:
- February 2011
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2011PhRvL.106e8701B
- Keywords:
-
- 87.23.Ge;
- 02.50.Le;
- 05.65.+b;
- 89.75.Kd;
- Dynamics of social systems;
- Decision theory and game theory;
- Self-organized systems;
- Patterns