Briggs, J. , & Peat, F. D. (1989). Turbulent mirror. New York: Harper & Row.
2.
Capra, F. & Stendl-Rast, D. with Matus, L. (1991). Belonging to the universe. San Francisco: Harper.
3.
Cody, W. K. (1996). Drowning in eclecticism. Nursing Science Quarterly, 9, 86-88.
4.
Cody, W. K. (1997). Of tombstones, milestones, and gemstones: A retrospective and prospective on nursing theory. Nursing Science Quarterly, 10, 3-5.
5.
Davidson, A. (1988). Choice patterns: A theory of the human-environment relationship. Unpublished doctoral dissertation. Boulder: University of Colorado.
6.
Davidson, A. , & Ray, M. (1991). Studying the human-environment phenomenon using the science of complexity. Advances in Nursing Science, 14(2), 73-87.
7.
Davidson, A. , Teicher, M., & Bar-Yam, Y. (1997). The role of environmental complexity in the well-being of the elderly. Complexity and Chaos in Nursing, 3, 5-12.
8.
Ditto, W. , & Pecora, L. (1993). Mastering chaos. Scientific American, 8, 78-84.
9.
Goodwin, B. (1994). How the leopard changed its spots: The evolution of complexity. New York: Simon & Schuster.
10.
Henderson, J. , Hamilton, P., & Vicenzi, S. (1995). Chaos theory in nursing publications: Retrospective and prospective views. Complexity and Chaos in Nursing, 2(l), 36-40.
11.
Horgan, J. (1995). From complexity to perplexity. Scientific American, 5, 104-109.
12.
Leininger, M. (1991). Culture care diversity and universality: A theory of nursing. New York: National League for Nursing Press.
13.
Leininger, M. (1996). Culture care theory. Nursing Science Quarterly, 9, 71-78.
14.
Lewin, R. (1992). Complexity: Life at the edge of chaos. New York: Macmillan.
15.
Newman, M. (1986). Health as expanding consciousness. St. Louis: Mosby.
16.
Newman, M. , Sime, M., & Corcoran-Perry, S. (1991). The focus of the discipline of nursing. Advances in Nursing Science, 14(1), 1-6.
17.
Nicolis, G. , & Prigogine, I. (1989). Exploring complexity. New York: W. H. Freeman.
18.
Parse, R. R. (1992). Human becoming: Parse's theory of nursing. Nursing Science Quarterly, 5, 35-42.
19.
Rafferty, A. (1995). Art, science and social science in nursing: Occupational origins and disciplinary identity. Nursing Inquiry, 2, 141-148.
20.
Ray, M. (1994). Complex caring dynamics: A unifying model of nursing inquiry. Theoretic and Applied Chaos in Nursing, 1(1), 23-32.
21.
Reed, P. (1997). Nursing: The ontology of the discipline. Nursing Science Quarterly, 10, 76-79.
22.
Rogers, M. (1970). An introduction to the theoretical basis of nursing. Philadelphia: F.A. Davis.
23.
Rogers, M. (1990). Nursing: Science of unitary, irreducible, human beings: Update 1990. In E. A. M. Barrett (Ed.), Visions of Rogers' science-based nursing (pp. 5-11). New York: National League for Nursing Press.
24.
Vicenzi, A. (1994). Chaos theory and some nursing considerations. Nursing Science Quarterly, 7, 36-42.
25.
Vicenzi, A. (Ed.) (1994). Theoretic and Applied Chaos in Nursing, Vol. 1.
26.
Vicenzi, A. (Ed.). (1995). Complexity and Chaos in Nursing, Vol. 2.
27.
Vicenzi, A. (Ed.). (1997). Complexity and Chaos in Nursing, Vol. 3.
28.
Vicenzi, A. , & Hamilton, P. (1990). Concerning partnerships between theoretical physics, mathematics, and community health nursing. In B. M. Chambers (Ed.), 1990 Papers: State of the art in community health education, research and practice (pp. 69-73). Louisville, KY: Association of Community Health Nursing Educators.
29.
Vicenzi, A. , White, K., & Begun, J. (1997). Chaos in nursing: Make it work for you. American Journal of Nursing, 97(10), 26-32.
30.
Watson, J. (1985). Nursing: Human science and human care. Norwalk, CT: Appleton-Century-Crofts.
31.
Watson, J. (1988). Nursing: Human science and human care. New York: National League for Nursing Press.
32.
Watson, J. (1997). The theory of human caring: Retrospective and prospective. Nursing Science Quarterly, 10, 49-52.
33.
West, B. (1990). Fractal physiology and chaos in medicine. London: World Scientific.
34.
West, B. , & Deering B. (1995). The lure of modern science-fractal thinking: Vol. 3. Studies of nonlinear phenomena in life sciences. River Edge, NJ: World Scientific.