Robert Rosen wrote extensively about many scientific subjects, with a research stream that always circled back to the essential question of 'What is life?' Below you can access most of his published work, as well as some unpublished notes, including the primary ideas that led to the development of Life Itself I: Epistemology, and its intended sequel, Life Itself II: Ontology.
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Comments on unknowability 08DEC1994

Topics:

Unknowability
Gödel
Biology
Dated
Typed notes
1994

Comments on “Letter to the Editor” by Philip F Henshaw

Henshaw misunderstands the distinction between causal relations and inferential relations, emphasizing the importance of the imaging process in establishing natural connections between events and their descriptions

Topics:

Causality
Abstraction
Logic
Science
Dated
Commentary
1985

Compatibility of the Enskog kinetic theory with hydrodynamics

This paper demonstrates that the compatibility condition of Enskog kinetic theory with equilibrium thermodynamics ensures that the hydrodynamic transport coefficients derived from it exhibit Onsager-Casimir symmetry

Topics:

Thermodynamics
Hydrodynamics
Dynamical Systems
Dated
Article
1981

Complexity and error in social dynamics

Topics:

Culture
Society
Complexity
Error
Undated
Article draft
Undated

Complexity and error in social dynamics

The text outlines a cultural dynamics model inspired by Colin Renfrew, highlighting how complexity and error contribute to cultural conflict arising from diverse interpretations by its members, and suggests applying system-theoretic concepts to address these conflicts

Topics:

Complexity
Culture
Modelling
Error
Dated
Article
1975
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