What will come next and how can we prepare for it? These were crucial questions even for early humans. We have always carried out experiments to explain phenomena.
The journey was long from personalising forces outside man’s control, spirits associated with natural phenomena, belief in various gods and anthropomorphic religions to ideas and shapes similar to or identified with physical laws, and to world creating and governing models.
Darwin’s evolution model stands out from models dealing with the "big picture”. Two hundred years earlier Spinoza already identified the conception of God with nature (deus sive natura), but Darwin’s evolution model explains the incredibly diverse development directions in nature with the specific operation and the specific selection and reproduction mechanisms of nature. This model has improved with the increasingly abundant paleontological finds and biological knowledge, and is apparently valid to many, not specifically biological processes in life.
For us, the Darwinian model shows a strong system of relations in systems and in the information technology procedures modelling them. This is why we have highlighted the key elements in the development of modelling. This development history forms the basis of and serves as a methodological aid for our epistemological thinking, progress and criticism.