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 Below you can access most of his published work, as well as some unpublished notes, including the primary ideas that led to the development of Life Itself I: Epistemology, and its intended sequel, Life Itself II: Ontology.
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Definitive Law of Corresponding States

Topics:

Mapping
Groups
Undated
Typed notes
Undated

Diagrams and chases in categories

Topics:

Mapping
Graphs
Composition
Category Theory
Dated
Typed notes
1994

Discursive, but again crucial 30JUL1993

Topics:

Mapping
Category Theory
Genotype
Phenotype
Dated
Typed notes
1993

Draft sections for proposed book on The Limits of Science

Topics:

Limits
Closed Systems
Machines
Complexity
Dated
Book draft
1995

Drawing the boundary between subject and object- Comments on the mind-brain problem

The mind-brain problem highlights the limitations of traditional objectivity in science, suggesting that complex systems with closed loops of causation challenge the notion that subjectivity can be fully rendered objective through materialism

Topics:

Physics
Consciousness
Machines
Objectivity
Simulation
Dated
Article
1993
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