A mixed bag of papers on artificial
        life, some previously published elsewhere, some written especially
      for the book. Like all collections of this kind, it is difficult to
      maintain a coherent story: some areas are ignored or assumed, others get
      repeated in many chapters, and the level of treatment varies. But the
      introduction is excellent, and some of the papers are classics.
Naturally, these papers stress the overriding importance of evolution,
      genotype and phenotype for A-Life. One other recurring thread is that much
      of the complexity of an organism's behaviour is due to the complexity of
      its environment, and that evolution is open-ended and that
      emergent properties occur only because the environment is open-ended.
      Hence artificial computer-based environments must be open-ended; the big
      question is, is that possible? If it is, computer-based A-Life could be
      possible, if not, A-Life must be embedded in robot bodies in the physical
      world.
The papers are gathered into five parts:
   background and introductory material
   specific examples of A-Life research
   specific explanatory strategies
   views of past philosophers on life in general
   functionalism, and 'strong' A-Life
The part I found least satisfying was how the views of past philosophers
      relate to A-Life. Personally, I find that I don't really care where Great
      Names were close to current thinking, and where they were way off beam --
      I just want to know what are the currently best available thoughts and
      ideas. But this is only a small part of the total collection, and each
      with their different preferences should enjoy some part of the whole.
Contents
  -   Introduction to The Philosophy of Artificial Life. 1996
- 
             The
              central concept of A-Life, excepting life itself, is self-organization.
              Self-organization involves the emergence (and maintenance) of
              order, or complexity, out of an origin that is ordered to a lesser
              degree. That is, it concerns not mere superficial change, but
              fundamental structural development. This development is
              'spontaneous', or 'autonomous', following from the intrinsic
              character of the system itself (often, in interaction with the
              environment) instead of being imposed on the system by some 
              external designer.    The
              behaviour of flocks of birds, for instance, must be described on
              its own level, although it results from the behaviour of
              individual birds.  [emergent properties
              are] not expressible in terms
              of --- though explicable by means of --- 
              [the lower-level properties]   Species
              can evolve more quickly in the presence of predators because the
              predator displaces prey from sub-optimal ... local maxima. 
             
-   Christopher G. Langton. Artificial Life. 1996
- [An updated version of his paper in Artificial Life I.]
          Background, history and overview of the subject area, with a
          whistle-stop tour of 18th century mechanical automata, von Neumann's
          self-reproducing cellular automaton, Lindenmayer systems, flocking
          'boids', genetic algorithms, Dawkins'
          biomorphs, the 'tit for tat' strategy in Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma,
          and Ray's Tierra.
-   Autonomy and Artificiality. 1996
- The implications of A-Life for our understanding of human
            autonomy, or freedom.
             [the artificial
              sciences]  help us to see how
              autonomous behaviour ... is possible, and to appreciate the
              awesome complexity of much human choice.  
-   Thomas S. Ray. An Approach to the Synthesis of Life. 1992
- A description of his virtual Tierra
environment, for studying artificial open-ended evolution
-   Richard M. Burian, Robert C. Richardson. Form and Order in Evolutionary Biology. 1996
- A critique of Stuart Kauffman's
          The Origins of Order
-   John Maynard Smith. Evolution --- Natural and Artificial. 1996
- A short overview of the current state of evolutionary biology
-   David J. McFarland. Animals as Cost-based Robots. 1996
- An analysis of animal behaviour in terms of cost functions, with
            the aim of making robots more animal-like:
            (1) animal
              behaviour is governed by mechanisms no different in principle from
              those that could be put in a robot; (2) these mechanisms are
              optimized (through evolution) with respect to the real costs ...
              of the animal's ecological niche; (3) similar design principles
              could be used in robotics  
-   Michael Wheeler. From Robots to Rothko: The Bringing Forth of Worlds. 1996
- An analysis of animal behaviour in terms of cost functions, with
            the aim of making robots more animal-like:
            (1) animal
              behaviour is governed by mechanisms no different in principle from
              those that could be put in a robot; (2) these mechanisms are
              optimized (through evolution) with respect to the real costs ...
              of the animal's ecological niche; (3) similar design principles
              could be used in robotics  
-   David Kirsh. Today the Earwig, Tomorrow Man?. 1996
- A critique of 'moboticist' Rod Brooks'
          position that "97 per cent of human activity is concept free,
          driven by control mechanisms we share … with insects"
-   Andy Clark. Happy Couplings: Emergence and Explanatory Interlock. 1996
- Using dynamical systems theory as a means of understanding
            emergent properties.
            As the
              complexities of interaction between parts increases, so the
              explanatory burden increasingly falls not on the parts but on
              their organisation.   
-   Horst Hendricks-Jansen. In Praise of Interactive Emergence, Or Why Explanations Don't Have to Wait for Implementation. 1996
- Using situated robotics to help explain human intentional behaviour and thought
-   Gareth B. Matthews. Aristotle on Life. 1996
-   Peter Godfrey-Smith. Spencer and Dewey on Life and Mind. 1996
-   Mark A. Bedau. The Nature of Life. 1996
- The offer of 'supple adaptation' as the essential principle of
            life, and a statistical measure of the supple adaptation of
            a population, which can be used to determine whether it is alive.
            The
              essential principle that explains the unified diversity of life
              seems to be this suppleness of the adaptive processes 
              its unending capacity to produce novel solutions to unanticipated
              changes in the problems of surviving, reproducing, or, more
              generally, flourishing. ... supple adaptation involves responding
              appropriately in an indefinite variety of ways to an unpredictable
              variety of contingencies. ...   A changing
            environment (or fitness function) is also a crucial part of supple
            evolution:When
              selection is based on a fixed fitness function, the resulting
              adaptive dynamics eventually stabilize rather than continually
              produce adaptive novelty.  
-   Elliott Sober. Learning from Functionalism--Prospects for Strong Artificial Life. 1992
-   Howard H. Pattee. Simulations, Realizations, and Theories of Life. 1989
- 
            Many of the
              controversies in AI result from the multiple use of computation as
              a conceptual theory, as an empirical tool, as simulation, and as
              realization of thought. AL models will have to make these
              distinctions.  ... it was
              also clear that the environment was too simple to produce
              interesting emergent behaviour.