WORK
<em>How Nature Works: The Science of Self-Organized Criticality</em>
Per Bak's
How Nature Works (Copernicus, 1996) was his definitive statement of
self-organized criticality for a broad scientific and general audience. The book walked through the
sandpile model, power-law distributions, the Bak-Sneppen evolutionary model, applications to earthquakes and forest fires, and speculative extensions to economics and neuroscience. Bak argued that self-organized criticality was not a curious property of specific systems but a universal organizing principle: complex systems with many interacting components naturally drive themselves toward critical states where small causes produce effects of any size. While peers found his claims overreaching, the book's core thesis — that power laws are signatures of criticality and criticality is a generic attractor — has been progressively vindicated by research showing that
neural networks, ecosystems, financial markets, and even the cortical activity underlying thought exhibit the dynamics Bak described.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The book's structure moved from the concrete (Chapter 1: sandpiles and rice piles) through the