Natural selection explains how traits survive. It does not fully explain how structured novelty arises.
The Evolving System develops an integrated evolutionary framework that combines natural selection with self-organization and cybernetic feedback. Rather than treating variation as undifferentiated randomness, this book examines how regulatory networks constrain possibility space, how attractor dynamics stabilize form, and how feedback loops deepen integration across scales.
From gene regulatory systems to multicellular coordination, from symbolic cognition to institutional structures, evolution is reframed as a recursive systems process:
• Self-organization generates structured variation
• Selection filters viable configurations
• Cybernetic feedback stabilizes coherence
Drawing from complexity science, developmental biology, niche construction theory, predictive processing, and dynamical systems modeling, this work proposes a broader explanatory architecture for understanding life's trajectory.
The result is not a rejection of Darwin, but a structural extension: evolution as an ongoing process of integration in which systems capable of modeling themselves emerge under constraint.
For readers interested in evolutionary theory, systems science, complexity, and the deep structure of biological organization, this book offers a rigorous synthesis of generative dynamics and selection.