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{{Book | {{Book | ||
|title= Systems Thinking and Complexity Science: Insights for Action | |title= Systems Thinking and Complexity Science: Insights for Action | ||
|book_image= | |book_image=Systems_Thinking_and_Complexity.jpg | ||
|author= Kurt Anders Richardson, Wendy J. Gregory, Gerald Midgley | |author= Kurt Anders Richardson, Wendy J. Gregory, Gerald Midgley | ||
|editor= | |editor= | ||
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'''Systems Thinking and Complexity Science: Insights for Action''' by [[Kurt Anders Richardson]], [[Wendy J. Gregory]] and [[Gerald Midgley]] is an innovative collaboration between social and forensic scientists enriches our knowledge of how statistical reasoning—essential to the evaluation of scientific evidence—is variously understood by the lawyers and laypersons who may encounter it in court. The book provides a critique of taken-for-granted assumptions concerning the nature and role of science in criminal trials and the more general relationship between scientific, | '''Systems Thinking and Complexity Science: Insights for Action''' by [[Kurt Anders Richardson]], [[Wendy J. Gregory]] and [[Gerald Midgley]] is an innovative collaboration between social and forensic scientists enriches our knowledge of how statistical reasoning—essential to the evaluation of scientific evidence—is variously understood by the lawyers and laypersons who may encounter it in court. The book provides a critique of taken-for-granted assumptions concerning the nature and role of science in criminal trials and the more general relationship between scientific, ‘common sense’ and legal discourses. | ||
==About the Book== | ==About the Book== | ||
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