Roman Frigg

[1] He is also visiting professor at the Munich Centre for Mathematical Philosophy at Ludwig Maximilian University.

[3] Frigg obtained his MSc in Theoretical Physics at the University of Basel and his PhD in Philosophy at the London School of Economics and Political Science under Nancy Cartwright and Carl Hoefer, with the thesis entitled Re-presenting Scientific Representation.

He often takes examples from the field to demonstrate how order is emergent, holistic, and contextual by universal and exceptionless laws.

[5] For instance, together with Robert Bishop, he explained that there is self-organization and patterns of emergent order in the universe rather than a system being built up just from independently calculated movement of its part.

[5] This theory is applied to explain phenomena such as heavenly bodies, global politics, and even family life, among others with the view that a domain is regarded as ordered once its objects are seen as behaving according to a general law.