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OXQ and Schweitzer Institute Announce Strategic Partnership to Develop Dynamic Symmetry Theory
OXQ: The Oxford Quarterly Journal of Symmetry & Asymmetry and The Schweitzer Institute announce a new strategic partnership to advance dynamic symmetry theory as a unifying framework for understanding complex systems across science, ethics, and public policy.
Dynamic symmetry theory—also known as “Edge theory”—proposes that living and complex systems flourish at the shifting boundary between order and chaos, where things are just structured enough to hold together and just unpredictable enough to change. It redefines symmetry as a dynamic, generative process, suggesting that the deepest regularities in nature are not fixed laws but ongoing negotiations between stability and transformation.
Under the new partnership, OXQ will serve as the primary publishing and public‑facing platform for work on dynamic symmetry, while the Schweitzer Institute will embed the theory in its research and advocacy on environmental ethics, climate policy, biodiversity, and animal protection. The collaboration brings together OXQ’s interdisciplinary editorial leadership—spanning physics, biology, philosophy, and the arts—with the Schweitzer Institute’s commitment to applying environmental ethics in practice, from scholarship and education to policy and on‑the‑ground stewardship.
“Dynamic symmetry offers a way of seeing how resilience, creativity, and ethical responsibility arise from the same underlying pattern,” said Benedict Rattigan, Director of the Schweitzer Institute and founding editor of OXQ. “By working together, OXQ and the Institute can test that insight from quantum systems to ecosystems and institutions, and translate it into practical guidance for policy and stewardship.”
The partnership will include:
“Traditional conservation has often tried to hold ecosystems in place,” a Schweitzer Institute statement notes. “Dynamic symmetry shows that real resilience lies in maintaining a living balance between order and change. This partnership allows us to ground that insight in both ethical principle and empirical science.”
Visitors can learn more about dynamic symmetry theory and the new partnership at www.oxq.org.uk and explore the Schweitzer Institute’s work at www.schweitzer.institute
11 January 2026
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