Abstract (EN):
Assessing urban sustainability is a crucial step towards solving the challenges we face today. Solutions to these challenges are likely to demand new and impressive levels of coordination: people will need to change their habits and learn to focus their actions in specific sustainable directions. The deeper nature of such challenges may be clarified through a classic concept from information theory and thermodynamics: entropy, both a measure of probability in the face of uncertainty and a measure of disorder. Arguing that the problem of entropy may throw light on issues of sustainability in social and urban systems, we propose in this chapter that sustainability can be stimulated by cities that enable us to coordinate better, reducing the entropy triggered by uncertainties and the unintended consequences of our actions. Investigating the role of cities in social entropy through a new agent-based model (ABM), we show that cities may play a crucial role in our conscious and unconscious efforts to cooperate.
Language:
English
Type (Professor's evaluation):
Scientific
No. of pages:
21