Computational foundations of the human world
Marcus J. Hamilton, Abhishek Yadav, Harrison Hartle, Jan Korbel, Niels Kornerup, Andrew J. Stier, Douglas H. Erwin, Hyejin Youn, Christopher P. Kempes, Hajime Shimao, Kyle Harper, James Evans, David H. Wolpert

TL;DR
This paper explores how computational principles from computer science can be applied to understand human social organization and collective decision-making processes.
Contribution
It introduces a novel perspective of analyzing social phenomena through computational frameworks, bridging computer science and social science.
Findings
Highlights social phenomena as computational problems
Proposes applying advanced computational approaches beyond traditional models
Identifies key social processes that can be studied computationally
Abstract
Human societies continuously transform scattered information into collective judgments and coordinated action, whether through markets discovering prices, governments allocating resources, communities enforcing norms, or science converging on reliable claims. Importantly, the computational difficulty of collective decision-making, particularly the time and communication required to reach solutions, imposes fundamental constraints on social organization. While theoretical computer science offers formal tools for analyzing such problems, for instance, by analyzing resource requirements, including time and memory, surprisingly, there is no domain of social science that focuses on the nature of computation in the human world. This perspective argues that we now have the opportunity to deploy these computational frameworks to study human social organization, opening research directions at…
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