Self-Organization being a Discipline on its own?
From Self-Organization Wiki
Self-organizing mechanisms and approaches can be found in many disciplines. Should we regard self-organizing systems as a discipline on its own?
Do we need experts that specialized on self-organizing systems or rather engineers with primary knowledge in some domain (eg, wireless systems, traffic management…) that took an introductional course to SO?
Viewpoint 1
Before answering this question, the following critical questions should be approached:
- Research: Is there a common vision for the field?
- Example: common vision in AI community
- Different methodologies used in applications involving SO
- Are there fundamental research questions that would require investigation from dedicated SO researcher?
- Teaching
- Skeptical on full curriculum, e.g., on Master level
- Rather put focus on SO for existing curricula
- Analogy: software engineering as a discipline
- Can SOS engineering achieve a similar role?
- What can SO experts contribute to engineer particular solutions (e.g., as part of a project)?
An interesting aspect is the emergence of many activities on self-organizing systems in the last few years: