Peter Andrew Corning (born 1935) is an American biologist, consultant, and complex systems scientist, Director of the Institute for the Study of Complex Systems, in Seattle, Washington. He is known especially for his work on the causal role of synergy in evolution.[1]
After graduating from Brown University, Corning served as a naval aviator and as a science writer at Newsweek magazine for two years before returning to graduate school. After his post-doctoral studies, he taught in the interdisciplinary Human Biology Program at Stanford University for nine years, along with research appointments in the Behavior Genetics Laboratory of the Stanford Medical School and in the Department of Engineering Economic Systems. Since 1991, Corning has served as the director of the Institute for the Study of Complex Systems and as a founding partner of a private consulting firm in Palo Alto, California.[2]
He was President of the International Society for the Systems Sciences in 1999, and is Treasurer of the International Society for Bioeconomics and a member of the board of directors of the Association for Politics and the Life Sciences. He is also on the board of directors of the Epic of Evolution Society, and has been an actively contributing member of the International Society for Human Ethology, the Human Behavior and Evolution Society, the International Society for Endocytobiology, the European Sociobiological Society, and the International Association for Cybernetics. In 1996, he was also the recipient of a research fellowship in evolutionary biology at the Collegium Budapest, an international institute for advanced study, in Hungary.[2]
Work
Peter Corning's research interests are in the fields bioeconomics, and the research "in greater depth on specific sources and economic consequences of functional synergy in nature and its role in biological and socio-cultural evolution. One area of particular interest is molecular level cybernetic processes. Another concerns the progressive evolution of energy-capturing mechanisms".[3]
Corning is known especially for his work on "the causal role of synergy in evolution. Other work includes a new approach to the relationship between thermodynamics and biology called "thermoeconomics", a new, cybernetic approach to information theory called "control information", and research on basic needs under the "Survival Indicators" Program".[1]
Publications
Corning has written seven books and more than 200 research papers and articles over the years. A selection:
1969. The Evolution of Medicare: From Idea to Law. U.S. Social Security Administration.
1971. The Theory of Evolution as a Paradigm for the Analysis of Social Behavior. Ph.D.
1981. The Synergism Hypothesis: A Theory of Progressive Evolution. McGraw-Hill
2003. Nature's Magic : Synergy in Evolution and the Fate of Humankind. Cambridge U. Press
2005. Holistic Darwinism : Synergy, Cybernetics, and the Bioeconomics of Evolution. U. Chicago Press
2011. The Fair Society: The Science of Human Nature and the Pursuit of Social Justice. U. Chicago Press
2018. Synergistic Selection: How Cooperation Has Shaped Evolution and the Rise of Humankind. World Scientific
Selected Articles:
1971. "The Biological Bases of Behavior and Some Implications for Political Science." World Politics
1975. "Toward a Survival Oriented Policy Science." Social Science Information
1995. "Synergy and Self-Organization in the Evolution of Complex Systems." Systems Research
1996. "Synergy, Cybernetics, and the Evolution of Politics." International Political Science Review
1996. "The Co-operative Gene: On the Role of Synergy in Evolution." Evolutionary Theory
1996. To be or Entropy: Or Thermodynamics, Information and Life Revisited, A Comic Opera in Two Acts. With Stephen Jay Kline. Prepared for the International Society for the Systems Sciences Annual Meeting, Budapest, Hungary, September 1996.
1997. "Holistic Darwinism: 'Synergistic Selection' and the Evolutionary Process." Journal of Social and Evolutionary Systems
1998. "The Synergism Hypothesis: On the Concept of Synergy and Its Role in the Evolution of Complex Systems." Journal of Social and Evolutionary Systems
2000. "Biological Adaptation in Human Societies: A 'Basic Needs' Approach." Journal of Bioeconomics
2001. "'Control Information': The Missing Element in Norbert Wiener's Cybernetic Paradigm." Kybernetes
2002. "The Re-emergence of Emergence: A Venerable Concept in Search of a Theory." Complexity
2002. "Thermoeconomics: Beyond the Second Law." Journal of Bioeconomics.
2007. "Synergy Goes to War: A Bioeconomic Theory of Collective Violence." Journal of Bioeconomics.
2007. "Control Information Theory: The 'Missing Link' in the Science of Cybernetics." Systems Research and Behavioral Science
2008. "What is Life? Among Other Things, It's a Synergistic Effect." Cosmos and History
2010. "The Re-emergence of Emergence, and the Causal Role of Synergy in Emergent Evolution." Synthese
2013. "Evolution 'On Purpose': How Behaviour Has Shaped the Evolutionary Process." Biological Journal of the Linnean Society
2013. "Rotating the Necker Cube: A Bioeconomic Approach to Cooperation and the Causal Role of Synergy in Evolution." Journal of Bioeconomics
2016. "The Science of Human Nature and the Social Contract." Cosmos and History
2019. "Teleonomy and the Proximate-Ultimate Distinction Revisited." Biological Journal of the Linnean Society
2020. "Beyond the Modern Synthesis: A Framework for a More Inclusive Biological Synthesis." Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology
2021. "'How' vs. 'Why' Questions in Symbiogenesis, and the Causal Role of Synergy." Bio-Systems