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Engineering defines systems science as “''the application of scientific principles to practical ends''” (Oxford English Dictionary).  We would expect engineering disciplines which take a [[Systems Approach (glossary)]] (such as systems engineering) to be based upon a [[System Science (glossary)]]The term science implies a well defined branch of knowledge, with a clearly recorded and coherent historical development.  This is not the case for systems science, which has a fragmented history.  For instance, some fundamental concepts now used in systems science have been present in other disciplines for many centuries, while equally fundamental concepts have independently emerged as recently as 40 or so years ago (Flood and Carson 1993).
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'''''Lead Author:''''' ''Rick Adcock'', '''''Contributing Authors:''''' ''Scott Jackson, Janet Singer, Duane Hybertson''
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This article is part of the [[Systems Science]] knowledge area (KA).  It describes some of the important multidisciplinary fields of research comprising systems science in historical context.
  
==Development of the system movement==
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Systems science is an integrative discipline which brings together ideas from a wide range of sources which share a common {{Term|System (glossary)|systems}} theme. Some fundamental concepts now used in systems science have been present in other disciplines for many centuries, while equally fundamental {{Term|Concept (glossary)|concepts}} have independently emerged as recently as 40 years ago (Flood and Carson 1993).
Many attribute the notion of thinking about the whole to the Greek philosophers, exemplified by the work of '''Aristotle''' in examining multiple discipline related aspects in what is termed metaphysics.  The explosion of knowledge in the natural and physical sciences during the Enlightenment of the 18th and 19th centuries made the move away from this natural philosophy approach to the creation of specialist disciplines inevitable. The only way for science to advance was for scientists to become expert in a narrow field of study.  As disciplines emerged they created their own models and views of reality, which become increasingly specialized and associated with a field of study.  The creation of educational structures to pass on this knowledge to the next generation of specialists perpetuates the fragmentation of knowledge into the present day (M’Pherson 1973).
 
  
Along with this increasing specialization of knowledge and education, the majority of western scientific study in the 19th century was based upon '''Descartes'''' notion of [[Reductionism (glossary)]] and [[Closed System (glossary)]], sometimes call '''Machine Age''', thinking (Flood 1999).  This approach forms models based on the study of things in isolation and the establishment of rules on how they relate to each other.  Unfortunately, this also led to a rational science movement, popularized by '''Popper''' (Popper 1972), which rejects any phenomena which do not fit with this rational view as not worthy of study.
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==The “Systems Problem”==
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Questions about the nature of systems, {{Term|Organization (glossary)|organization}}, and {{Term|Complexity (glossary)|complexity}} are not specific to the modern age. As International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE) pioneer and former International Society for System Sciences (ISSS) President John Warfield put it, “Virtually every important concept that backs up the key ideas emergent in systems literature is found in ancient literature and in the centuries that follow.” (Warfield 2006.) It was not until around the middle of the 20th Century, however, that there was a growing sense of a need for, and possibility of a scientific approach to {{Term|Problem (glossary)|problems}} of organization and complexity in a “science of systems” per se.  
  
While these ideas of specialist knowledge and rational analysis have provided a useful model through which a vast amount of scientific knowledge has been gained, they can also be a barrier to our ability to gain knowledge across disciplines and outside of the closed system view.  The systems movement has its roots in two areas of science: the biological-social sciences; and a mathematical-managerial base stemming first from cybernetics and later from organizational theory.  Both of which have developed around an [[Open System (glossary)]] and systemic thinking approach.
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The explosion of knowledge in the natural and physical sciences during the 18th and 19th centuries had made the creation of specialist disciplines inevitable: in order for science to advance, there was a need for scientists to become expert in a narrow field of study. The creation of educational structures to pass on this knowledge to the next generation of specialists perpetuated the fragmentation of knowledge (M’Pherson 1973).  
  
Over the last century and into the current one, system science practitioners have considered unified theories of systems and sciences; produced hard approaches to optimize system solutions, and produced soft approaches to create systems of problem understanding and critical approaches based on system of system approaches.
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This increasing specialization of knowledge and education proved to be a strength rather than a weakness for problems which were suited to the prevailing scientific methods of experimental isolation and analytic reduction. However, there were areas of both basic and applied science that were not adequately served by those methods alone. The systems movement has its roots in two such areas of science: the biological-social sciences, and a mathematical-managerial base stemming first from cybernetics and operations research, and later from organizational theory.
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Biologist Ludwig von Bertalanffy was one of the first to argue for and develop a broadly applicable scientific research approach based on '''Open System Theory''' (Bertalanffy 1950). He explained the scientific need for systems research in terms of the limitations of analytical procedures in science.
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These limitations, often expressed as {{Term|Emergence (glossary)|emergent}} evolution or "the whole is more than a sum of its parts,” are based on the idea that an entity can be resolved into and reconstituted from its parts, either material or conceptual:
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<blockquote> ''This is the basic principle of "classical" science, which can be circumscribed in different ways: resolution into isolable causal trains or seeking for "atomic" units in the various fields of science, etc.''  </blockquote>
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He stated that while the progress of "classical" science has shown that these principles, first enunciated by Galileo and Descartes, are highly successful in a wide realm of phenomena, but two conditions are required for these principles to apply:
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<blockquote>  ''The first is that interactions between "parts" be non-existent or weak enough to be neglected for certain research purposes. Only under this condition, can the parts be "worked out," actually, logically, and mathematically, and then be "put together." The second condition is that the relations describing the behavior of parts be linear; only then is the condition of summativity given, i.e., an equation describing the behavior of the total is of the same form as the equations describing the behavior of the parts. ''</blockquote>
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<blockquote> ''These conditions are not fulfilled in the entities called systems, i.e. consisting of parts "in interaction" and description by nonlinear mathematics.  These system entities describe many real world situations: populations, eco systems, organizations and complex man made technologies. The methodological problem of systems theory is to provide for problems beyond the analytical-summative ones of classical science.'' (Bertalanffy 1968, 18-19) </blockquote>
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Bertalanffy also cited a similar argument by mathematician and co-founder of information theory Warren Weaver in a 1948 American Scientist article on “Science and Complexity.”  Weaver had served as Chief of the Applied Mathematics Panel at the U.S. Office of Scientific Research and Development during WWII. Based on those experiences, he proposed an agenda for what he termed a new “science of problems of organized {{Term|Complexity (glossary)|complexity}}.”
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Weaver explained how the mathematical methods which had led to great successes of science to date were limited to problems where appropriate simplifying assumptions could be made. What he termed “problems of simplicity” could be adequately addressed by the mathematics of mechanics, while “problems of disorganized complexity” could be successfully addressed by the mathematics of statistical mechanics. But with other problems, making the simplifying assumptions in order to use the methods would not lead to helpful {{Term|Solution (glossary)|solutions}}. Weaver placed in this category problems such as, ''how the genetic constitution of an organism expresses itself in the characteristics of the adult'', and ''to what extent it is safe to rely on the free interplay of market forces if one wants to avoid wide swings from prosperity to depression''. He noted that these were {{Term|Complex (glossary)|complex}} problems which involved “analyzing systems which are organic wholes, with their parts in close interrelation.”
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<blockquote>  ''These problems-and a wide range of similar problems in the biological, medical, psychological, economic, and political sciences-are just too complicated to yield to the old nineteenth century techniques which were so dramatically successful on two-, three-, or four-variable problems of simplicity. These new problems, moreover, cannot be handled with the statistical techniques so effective in describing average behavior in problems of disorganized complexity [problems with elements exhibiting random or unpredictable behavior].''
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</blockquote>
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These new critical global problems require science to make a third great advance,
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<blockquote> ''An advance that must be even greater than the nineteenth-century conquest of problems of simplicity or the twentieth-century victory over problems of disorganized complexity. Science must, over the next 50 years, learn to deal with these problems of organized complexity [problems for which complexity “emerges” from the coordinated interaction between its parts].'' (Weaver 1948.)
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</blockquote>
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Weaver identified two grounds for optimism in taking on this great challenge: 1.) developments in mathematical {{Term|Model (glossary)|modeling}} and digital {{Term|Simulation (glossary)|simulation}}, and 2.) the success during WWII of the “mixed team” approach of operations analysis, where individuals from across disciplines brought their skills and insights together to solve critical, complex problems.
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The importance of modeling and simulation and the importance of working across disciplinary boundaries have been the key recurring themes in development of this “third way” science for systems problems of organized complexity.
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==The Development of Systems Research==
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The following overview of the evolution of systems science is broadly chronological, but also follows the evolution of different {{Term|Paradigm (glossary)|paradigms}} in system theory.
  
==The Development of Systems Science==
 
The following overview of the evolution of system science is broadly chronological, but also follows the evolution of [[Systems Thinking|system thinking]].
 
 
===Open Systems and General Systems Theory===
 
===Open Systems and General Systems Theory===
'''Ludwig von Bertalanffy''' developed a research approach based on '''Open System Theory''' (Bertalanffy 1950). He was one of a number of natural scientists who realized that the '''reductionist''' '''closed system''' approach could not be used to explain the behavior of an organism in its environment.
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{{Term|General System Theory (glossary)|General system theory}} (GST) attempts to formulate {{Term|Principle (glossary)|principles}} relevant to all {{Term|Open System (glossary)|open systems}} (Bertalanffy 1968). GST is based on the idea that correspondence relationships (homologies) exist between systems from different disciplines. Thus, knowledge about one system should allow us to reason about other systems. Many of the generic system concepts come from the investigation of GST.  
  
'''Open system theory''' considers an organism as a complex entity composed of many parts with an overall integrity, co-existing in an environment. In an open system the organism's structure is maintained, or adapts, through a continual exchange of energy and information with its environment.
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In 1954, Bertalanffy co-founded, along with Kenneth Boulding (economist), Ralph Gerard (physiologist) and Anatol Rapoport (mathematician), the Society for General System Theory (renamed in 1956 to the Society for General Systems Research, and in 1988 to the International Society for the Systems Sciences).  
  
[[General System Theory (glossary)]] (GST), attempts to formulate principles relevant to all open systems (Bertalanffy 1968).  GST is based on the idea that correspondence relationships ('''homologies''') exist between systems from different disciplines.  Thus, knowledge about one system should allow us to reason about other systems. Many of the generic [[System Concepts|system concepts]] come from the investigation of GST.
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The initial purpose of the society was "to ''encourage the development of theoretical systems which are applicable to more than one of the traditional departments of knowledge ... and promote the unity of science through improving the communication among specialists''." (Bertalanffy 1968.)
  
GST also implies a scientific approach, with identified laws and generalized theory to unify all science.  Bertalanffy was co-founder, along with '''Kenneth Boulding''' (economist), '''Ralph Gerard''' (physiologist) and '''Anatol Rapoport''' (mathematician), of the Society for '''General Systems Research''' in 1957.  This group is considered by many to be the founders of '''System Age Thinking''' (Flood 1999).
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This group is considered by many to be the founders of '''System Age Thinking''' (Flood 1999).
  
 
===Cybernetics===
 
===Cybernetics===
[[Cybernetics (glossary)]] was defined by '''Wiener''', '''Ashby''' and others as the study and modeling of communication, regulation and control in systems (Ashby 1956; Wiener 1948). Cybernetics studies the flow of information through a system and how information is used by the system to control itself through feedback mechanisms.  Early work in cybernetics in the 1940s was applied to electronic and mechanical networks, and was one of the disciplines used in the formation of early systems theory.  It has since been used as a set of founding principles for all of the significant system disciplines.
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{{Term|Cybernetics (glossary)|Cybernetics}} was defined by Wiener, Ashby and others as the study and modeling of communication, regulation, and {{Term|Control (glossary)|control}} in systems (Ashby 1956; Wiener 1948). Cybernetics studies the flow of information through a system and how information is used by the system to control itself through feedback mechanisms.  Early work in cybernetics in the 1940s was applied to electronic and mechanical networks, and was one of the disciplines used in the formation of early systems theory.  It has since been used as a set of founding principles for all of the significant system disciplines.
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Some of the key concepts of feedback and control from Cybernetics are expanded in the [[Concepts of Systems Thinking]] article.
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===Operations Research===
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{{Term|Operations Research (glossary)|Operations Research}} (OR) considers the use of technology by an organization.  It is based on the use of mathematical modeling and statistical analysis to optimize decisions on the deployment of the resources under an organization's control.  An interdisciplinary approach based on scientific methods, OR arose from military planning techniques developed during World War II.  
  
===Operations Research and Organizational Cybernetics===
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'''Operations Research and Management Science''' (ORMS) was formalized in 1950 by Ackoff and Churchman applying the ideas and techniques of OR to organizations and organizational decisions (Churchman et. al. 1950).
[[Operations Research (glossary)]] (OR) considers the use of technology by an organization.  It is based on mathematical modeling and statistical analysis to optimize decisions on the deployment of the resources under an organization's control. It arises from military planning techniques developed during World War II.
 
  
'''Operations Research and Management Science''' (ORMS) was formalized in 1950 by '''Ackoff''' and '''Churchman''' applying the ideas and techniques of OR to organizations and organizational decisions (Churchman et al 1950).  
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===Systems Analysis===
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Systems analysis was developed by RAND Corporation in 1948. It borrowed from and extended OR, including using black boxes and feedback loops from cybernetics to construct block diagrams and flow graphs. In 1961, the Kennedy Administration decreed that systems analysis techniques should be used throughout the government to provide a quantitative basis for broad decision-making problems, combining OR with cost analysis (Ryan 2008).
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===Systems Dynamics===
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Systems dynamics (SD) uses some of the ideas of cybernetics to consider the {{Term|Behavior (glossary)|behavior}} of systems as a whole in their {{Term|Environment (glossary)|environment}}. SD was developed by Jay Forrester in the 1960’s (Forrester 1961). He was interested in modeling the dynamic behavior of systems such as populations in cities and industrial supply chains. See [[Systems Approaches]] for more details.
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SD is also used by Senge (1990) in his influential book ''The Fifth Discipline''. This book advocates a systems thinking approach to organization and also makes extensive use of SD notions of feedback and control.
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===Organizational Cybernetics===
 
   
 
   
'''Stafford Beer''' was one of the first to take a cybernetics approach to organizations (Beer 1959).  For Beer the techniques of ORMS are best applied in the context of an understanding of the whole system. Beer also developed a '''Viable Systems Model''' (Beer 1972), which encapsulates the effective organization needed for a system to be [[Viable (glossary)]] (to survive and adapt in its environment).
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Stafford Beer was one of the first to take a cybernetics approach to organizations (Beer 1959).  For Beer, the techniques of ORMS are best applied in the context of an understanding of the whole system. Beer also developed a '''Viable Systems Model''' (Beer 1979), which encapsulates the effective organization needed for a system to be {{Term|Viable (glossary)|viable}} (to survive and adapt in its environment).
  
Work in cybernetics and ORMS consider the mechanism for communication and control in complex systems, and particularly in organizations and management sciences. They provide useful approaches for dealing with operational and tactical problems within a system, but do not allow consideration of more strategic organizational problems (Flood 1999).
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Works in cybernetics and ORMS consider the mechanism for communication and control in complex systems, and particularly in organizations and management sciences. They provide useful approaches for dealing with operational and tactical problems within a system, but do not allow consideration of more strategic organizational problems (Flood 1999).
  
===Systems dynamics===
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===Hard and Soft Systems Thinking===
'''Systems Dynamics''' (SD) uses some of the ideas of cybernetics to consider the behavior of systems as a whole in their environment.  SD was developed by '''Jay Forrester''' in the 1960’s (Forrester 1961). He was interested in modeling the dynamic behavior of systems such as populations in cities, industrial supply chains. 
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Action research is an approach, first described by Kurt Lewin, as a reflective process of progressive problem solving in which reflection on action leads to a deeper understanding of what is going on and to further investigation (Lewin 1958).  
  
SD is also used by '''Senge''' (Senge 1990) in his influential book '''[[The Fifth Discipline]]'''.  This book advocates a system thinking approach to organization, and makes extensive use of SD notions of feedback and control.
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Peter Checkland’s action research program in the 1980‘s led to an Interpretative-Based Systemic Theory which seeks to understand organizations by not only observing the actions of people, but also by building understandings of the cultural {{Term|Context (glossary)|context}}, intentions and perceptions of the individuals involved. Checkland, himself starting from a {{Term|Systems Engineering (glossary)|systems engineering}} (SE) perspective, successively observed the problems in applying a SE approach to the more fuzzy, ill-defined problems found in the social and political arenas (Checkland 1978). Thus, he introduced a distinction between hard systems and soft systems - see also [[Systems Approaches]].
  
===Hard Systems Methodologies===
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{{Term|Hard System (glossary)|Hard systems}} views of the world are characterized by the ability to define {{Term|Purpose (glossary)|purposes}}, goals, and {{Term|Mission (glossary)|missions}} that can be addressed via {{Term|Engineering (glossary)|engineering}} methodologies in an attempt to, in some sense, “optimize” a solution. 
Checkland (Checkland 1978) classifies [[Hard System (glossary)]] methodologies, which set out to select an efficient means to achieve a predefined end, under the following headings:
 
  
#'''System Analysis''', the systematic appraisal of the costs and other implications of meeting a defined requirement in various ways.
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In hard system approaches, the problems may be complex and difficult but they are known and can be fully expressed by the investigator. Such problems can be solved by selecting from the best available solutions (possibly with some modification or {{Term|Integration (glossary)|integration}} to create an optimum solution). In this context, the term "systems" is used to describe real world things; a solution system is selected, created and then deployed to solve the problem.
#'''Systems Engineering''', the set of activities that together lead to the creation of a complex man-made entity and/or the procedures and information flows associated with its operation.
 
  
'''Operational Research''' is also considered a hard system approach, closely related to the '''Systems Analysis''' approach developed by the '''Rand Corporation''', in which solutions are known but the best combinations of these solutions must be found.  There is some debate as to whether '''System Dynamics''' is a hard approach, which is used to assess the objective behavior of real situations. Many application of SD have focused on the system, however it can and has also be used as part of a soft approach including the modelling of subjective perceptions (Lane 2000).  
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{{Term|Soft System (glossary)|Soft systems}} views of the world are characterized by complex, problematical, and often mysterious phenomena for which concrete goals cannot be established and which require learning in order to make improvement. Such systems are not limited to the social and political arenas and also exist within and amongst {{Term|Enterprise (glossary)|enterprises}} where complex, often ill-defined patterns of behavior are observed that are limiting the enterprise's ability to improve.  
  
'''Systems Engineering''' allows for the creation of new solution systems, based upon available technologiesThis hard view of systems engineering as a solution focused approach applied to large, complex and technology focused solutions, is exemplified by (Jenkins 1969; Hall 1962) and early defense and aerospace standards.
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Soft system approaches reject the idea of a single problem and consider '''problematic''' situations in which different people will perceive different issues depending upon their own viewpoint and experience.  These problematic situations are not solved but managed through interventions which seek to reduce "discomfort" among the participantsThe term system is used to describe systems of ideas, conceptual systems which guide our understanding of the situation, or help in the selection of intervention strategies.
  
'''NOTE''': More recent developments in systems engineering have incorporated problem focused thinking and agile solution approaches.  It is this view of SE that is described in this SEBoK.
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These three ideas of “problem vs. problematic situation,” “solution vs. discomfort reduction,” and “the system vs. systems understanding” encapsulate the differences between hard and soft approaches (Flood and Carson 1993).
  
All of these hard approaches use systems thinking to ensure complete and viable solutions are created and/or as part of the solution optimization process.  These approaches are appropriate to [[Unitary (glossary)]] problems, but not when the problem situation or solution technologies are unclear.
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===Critical Systems Thinking===
  
===Soft Systems and Problem Structured Methods===
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The development of a range of hard and soft methods naturally leads to the question of which method to apply in what circumstances (Jackson 1989).  {{Term|Critical Systems Thinking (glossary)|Critical systems thinking}} (CST), or '''critical management science''' (Jackson 1985), attempts to deal with this question.   
'''Problem Structuring Methods''' (PSM) are interactive and participatory approaches to assist groups of diverse participants to alleviate a complex, problematic situation of common interest.  Typically the hardest element of the situation is framing the issues which constitute the problem (Minger and Resenhead 2004).   
 
  
PSM use systems and systems thinking as an abstract framework for investigation, rather than a structure for creating solutionsSystems descriptions are used to understand the current situation and describe an idealized future. Interventions directly in the current organization to move towards the idea recognize that the assumptions and mental models of the participants are an important obstruction to change and that these differing views cannot be dismissed but must form part of the intervention approach.
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The word '''critical''' is used in two waysFirstly, critical thinking considers the limits of knowledge and investigates the limits and assumptions of hard and soft systems, as discussed in the above sections.  The second aspect of critical thinking considers the ethical, political and coercive dimension and the role of system thinking in society; see also [[Systems Approaches]].
  
'''Action Research''' is an approach first described by '''Kurt Lewin''' as a reflective process of progressive problem solving in which reflection on action leads to a deeper understanding of what is going on and to further investigation (Lewin 1958).
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==Service Science and Service Systems Engineering==
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The world economies have transitioned over the past few decades from manufacturing economies that provide goods,  to service based economies. Harry Katzan defined the newly emerging field of service science:  "Service science is defined as the application of scientific, engineering, and management competencies that a service-provider organization performs that creates value for the benefit of the client or customer" (Katzan 2008, vii).
  
'''Peter Checkland’s''' action research program in the 1980‘s led to an '''Interpretative-based Systemic Theory''' which seeks to understand organizations by not only observing the actions of people, but by building understandings of the cultural context, intentions and perceptions of the individuals involved.  This theory forms the basis of work by '''Checkland''', '''Wilson''' and others in the development of [[Soft Systems Methodology (glossary)]] (SSM) (Checkland 1999; Wilson 2001).  SSM formalizes the idea of a soft approach using systemic thinking to expose the issues in a problem situation and guide interventions to reduce them. SSM provides a framework of ideas and models to help guide participants through this systemic thinking.   
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The disciplines of [[Service Science|service science]] and [[Service Systems Engineering|service engineering]] have developed to support this expansion and are built on principles of [[Systems Thinking|systems thinking]] but applied to the development and delivery of {{Term|Service System (glossary)|service systems}}.   
  
Other PSM approaches include '''Interactive Planning Approach''' (Ackoff 1981); '''Social Systems Design''' (Churchman 1968), and '''Strategic Assumptions Surfacing and Testing''' (Mason and Mitroff 1981).  
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Service Systems Engineering is described more fully in the [[Service Systems Engineering]] KA in [[Applications of Systems Engineering|Part 4]] of the SEBoK.
  
SSM and other soft approaches use systems thinking to ensure problem situations are fully explored and resolved.  These approaches are appropriate to [[Pluralist (glossary)]] problems. Critics of SSM suggest that it does not consider the process of intervention, and in particular how differences in power between individuals and social groups impacts the effectiveness of interventions.
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==References==
  
===Critical systems thinking and Multimethodology===
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===Works Cited===
  
The development of a range of hard and soft methods naturally leads to the question of which method to apply when (Jackson 1989).  [[Critical Systems Thinking (glossary)]] (CST) or '''Critical Management Science''' Jackson (Jackson 1985) attempts to deal with this question.
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Ackoff, R.L. 1971. "Towards a system of systems concepts," ''Management Science,'' vol. 17, no. 11.  
  
The word '''critical''' is used in two ways. Firstly, critical thinking considers the limits of knowledge and investigates the limits and assumptions of hard and soft systems, as discussed in the above sections. From this comes frameworks and meta-methodology for when to apply different methods such as '''Total Systems Intervention''' (TSI) (Flood and Jackson 1991).
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Ashby, W. R. 1956. ''Introduction to Cybernetics.'' London, UK: Methuen.  
  
The '''Multi-Methodology''' approach takes this aspect of critical thinking one stage further to recognize the value of combining techniques from several hard or soft methods as needed (Mingers and Gill 1997).
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Beer, S. 1959.'' Cybernetics and Management.'' London, UK: English Universities; New York: Wiley and Sons.
  
The second aspect of '''critical''' thinking considers the ethical, political and coercive dimension and the role of system thinking in society.  The addition of the [[Coercive (glossary)]] dimension in Jackson's SOSM framework (Jackson 1990) (see [[Systems Thinking]] for more detail) adds the [[Postmodernist (glossary)]] dimension to CST. While these ideas sit at the extreme of system thinking as a tool for problem solving, Jackson (Jackson 2003) identifies the work of some authors who have included these ideas into their systems approach.
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Beer, S. 1979. ''The Heart of the Enterprise''. Chichester, UK: Wiley.
  
==References==
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Bertalanffy, L. von. 1950. "The theory of open systems in physics and biology," ''Science'', New Series, vol. 111, no. 2872, Jan 13, pp. 23-29.
  
===Citations===
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Bertalanffy, L. von. 1968. ''[[General System Theory: Foundations, Development, Applications]],'' Revised ed. New York, NY, USA: Braziller. 
  
Flood, R. L., & Carson, E. R. 1993. Dealing with complexity: An introduction to the theory and application of systems science (2nd ed.). New York: Plenum Press.
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Checkland, P. 1978. "The origins and nature of “hard” systems thinking,"  ''Journal of Applied Systems Analysis'', vol. 5, no. 2, pp. 99-110.
  
M’Pherson, P, K. 1974. A perspective on systems science and systems philosophy.  Futures Volume 6, Issue 3, June 1974, Pages 219-239
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Checkland, P. 1999. ''[[Systems Thinking, Systems Practice]]'', New York, NY, USA: John Wiley & Sons.
  
Flood, R. L. 1999. Rethinking the fifth discipline: Learning within the unknowable. Routledge  (London and New York)
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Churchman, C.W. 1968. ''The Systems Approach.'' New York, NY, USA: Dell Publishing.
  
Popper, K. R. (1972/9): Objective Knowledge, 1st or 2nd edition, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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Churchman, C.W., R.L. Ackoff. and E.L. Arnoff. 1950. ''Introduction to Operations Research.'' New York, NY, USA: Wiley and Sons.
  
von Bertalanffy, L. 1950. The theory of Open Systems in Physics and Biology. Science, New Series, Vol. 111, No 2872 (Jan 13), pages 23-29 
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Flood, R.L. 1999. ''[[Rethinking the Fifth Discipline]]: Learning within the Unknowable.'' London, UK: Routledge.
  
von Bertalanffy, L. 1968. General system theory: Foundations, development, applications. Revised ed. New York, NY: Braziller.
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Flood, R.L. and E.R. Carson. 1993. ''Dealing with Complexity: An Introduction to the Theory and Application of Systems Science,'' 2nd ed. New York, NY, USA: Plenum Press.
  
Wiener, N. 1948. Cybernetics or control and communication in the animal and the machine. Hermann & Cie Editeurs, Paris, The Technology Press, Cambridge, Mass., John Wiley & Sons Inc., New York
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Forrester, J. 1961. ''Industrial Dynamics''. Cambridge, MA, USA: MIT Press.
  
Ashby, W. R. 1956. Introduction to Cybernetics. Methuen, London, UK.  
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Jackson, M. 1985. "Social systems theory and practice: The need for a critical approach,"  ''International Journal of General Systems,'' vol. 10, pp. 135-151.
  
Churchman, C.W. Ackoff, R.L. and Arnoff, E.L. 1950. Introduction to Operations Research. Wiley, New York.
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Jackson, M. 1989. "Which systems methodology when?  Initial results from a research program." In: R. Flood, M. Jackson and P. Keys (eds). ''Systems Prospects: The Next Ten Years of Systems Research.'' New York, NY, USA: Plenum.
  
Beer, S. 1959. Cybernetics and Management. English Universities, London; Wiley, New York.
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Jackson, M. 2003. ''Systems Thinking: Creating Holisms for Managers''. Chichester, UK: Wiley.
  
Beer, S. 1979. The Heart of the Enterprise; Wiley, Chichester.
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Katzan, H. 2008. ''Service Science.'' Bloomington, IN, USA: iUniverse Books.
  
Forrester, J. 1961. Industrial Dynamics. MIT Press; Cambridge, MA.
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Lewin, K. 1958. ''Group Decision and Social Change.'' New York, NY, USA: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. p. 201.  
  
Senge, P. 1990. The Fifth Discipline: the Art and Practice of the Learning Organisation. Century Books; London.  
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Magee, C. L., O.L. de Weck. 2004. "[[Complex System Classification|Complex system classification]]."  Proceedings of the 14th Annual International Council on Systems Engineering International Symposium, Toulouse, France, 20-24 June 2004.
  
Checkland, P.B. 1975.  The origins and nature of “hard” systems thinking. Journal of Applied Systems Analysis, 5.
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M’Pherson, P, K. 1974. "A perspective on systems science and systems philosophy,"  ''Futures,'' vol. 6, no. 3, June 1974, pp. 219-239.
  
Jenkins, G.M. 1969. The Systems ApproachIn Beishon, J and Peters, G. (eds.), Systems Behavior (2nd ed.). Harper and Row; New York.
+
Miller, J.G. 1986"Can systems theory generate testable hypothesis?: From Talcott Parsons to living systems theory,"  ''Systems Research,'' vol. 3, pp. 73-84.
  
Hall, A. D. 1962.  A methodology for systems engineering. Van Nostrand Reinhold; New York.
+
Ryan, A. 2008. “What is a systems approach?”'' Journal of Nonlinear Science.
  
Mingers, J, and Rosenhead, J. 2004. Problem Structuring Methods in action. European Journal of Operations Research.
+
Senge, P.M. 1990. ''The Fifth Discipline: The Art & Practice of the Learning Organization.'' New York, NY, USA: Doubleday Business.
  
Lewin, K. 1958. Group Decision and Social Change. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. pp. 201.  
+
Weaver, W. 1948. “Science and complexity,” ''American Scientist,'' vol. 36, pp. 536-544.  
  
Checkland, P. 1999. Systems Thinking, Systems Practice, New York, John Wiley & Sons.  
+
Wiener, N. 1948. ''Cybernetics or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine.''  Paris, France: Hermann & Cie Editeurs; Cambridge, MA, USA: The Technology Press; New York, NY, USA: John Wiley & Sons Inc.
  
Wilson, B. 2001, Soft Systems Methodology—Conceptual model building and its contribution.  J.H.Wiley.
+
===Primary References===
  
Ackoff, R.L. 1981. Creating the Corporate Future. Wiley; New York.
+
Bertalanffy, L. von. 1968. ''[[General System Theory: Foundations, Development, Applications]],'' Revised ed. New York, NY, USA: Braziller.
  
Churchman, C. W. 1968. The Systems Approach. Dell Publishing; New York.
+
Chang, C.M., 2010. ''[[Service Systems Management and Engineering]]: Creating Strategic Differentiation and Operational Excellence.''  Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley and Sons.
  
Mason, R. O. and Mitroff, I. I. 1981. Challenging Strategic Planning Assumptions: theory, case and techniques, Wiley; New York.
+
Checkland, P. 1999. ''[[Systems Thinking, Systems Practice]].'' New York, NY, USA: John Wiley & Sons.  
  
Jackson, M. 1989. Which Systems methodology when?  Initial results from a research program. In: R Flood, M Jackson and P Keys (eds).  Systems Prospects: the Next Ten Years of Systems Research, Plenum, New York.
+
Flood, R. L. 1999. ''[[Rethinking the Fifth Discipline]]: Learning within the Unknowable.'' London, UK: Routledge.
  
Jackson, M. 1985. Social systems theory and practice: the need for a critical approach. International Journal of General Systems 10, 135-151.
+
Jackson, M. 1985. "[[Social Systems Theory and Practice|Social systems theory and practice]]: The need for a critical approach," ''International Journal of General Systems,'' vol. 10, pp. 135-151.
  
Flood R and Jackson M. 1991. Creative Problem Solving: Total Systems Intervention. Wiley; London.
+
===Additional References===
  
Mingers, J and Gill A. 1997. Multimethodology: Theory and Practice of Combining Management Science Methodologies.  Wiley; Chichester.
+
Ackoff, R.L. 1981. ''Creating the Corporate Future.'' New York, NY, USA: Wiley and Sons.
  
Jackson, M. C. and Keys, P. 1984. Towards a System of Systems Methodologies. The Journal of the Operational Research Society. Vol. 35, No. 6 (Jun.,), pp. 473-486
+
Blanchard, B.S., and W.J. Fabrycky. 2005. ''Systems Engineering and Analysis,'' 4th ed. Prentice-Hall International Series in Industrial and Systems Engineering. Englewood Cliffs, NJ, USA: Prentice-Hall.  
  
Jackson, M. 2003. Systems Thinking: Creating Holisms for Managers. Wiley; Chichester
+
Bowler, D.T. 1981. ''General Systems Thinking: Its Scope and Applicability.'' Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Elsevier.
  
===Primary References===
+
Boulding, K.E. 1996. ''The World as a Total System.'' Beverly Hills, CA, USA: Sage Publications.
  
von Bertalanffy, L. 1968. [[General System Theory: Foundations, Development, Applications]]. Revised ed. New York, NY: Braziller.
+
Hitchins, D. 2007. ''Systems Engineering: A 21st Century Systems Methodology.'' Hoboken, NJ, USA: Wiley.
  
Checkland, P. 1999. [[Systems Thinking, Systems Practice]], New York, John Wiley & Sons.  
+
Laszlo, E. (ed). 1972. ''The Relevance of General Systems Theory.'' New York, NY, USA: George Brazillier.  
  
Flood, R. L. 1999. [[Rethinking the Fifth Discipline]]: Learning within the unknowable. Routledge  (London and New York)
+
Skyttner, L. 1996. ''General Systems Theory - An Introduction.'' Basingstoke, UK: Macmillan Press.
  
Jackson, M. 1985. [[Social Systems Theory and Practice]]: the need for a critical approachInternational Journal of General Systems 10, 135-151.
+
Warfield, J.N. 2006. ''An Introduction to Systems Science.'' Singapore: World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte Ltd.
 +
Chang, C.M. 2010. ''[[Service Systems Management and Engineering]]: Creating Strategic Differentiation and Operational Excellence.'' Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley and Sons.
  
===Additional References===
+
Lusch, R.F. and S. L. Vargo (Eds). 2006. ''The Service-Dominant Logic of Marketing: Dialog, Debate, and Directions.'' Armonk, NY: ME Sharpe Inc.
  
Warfield, J.N. 2006, An Introduction to Systems Science, World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte Ltd, Singapore (2006).  
+
Maglio P., S. Srinivasan, J.T. Kreulen, and J. Spohrer. 2006. “Service Systems, Service Scientists, SSME, and Innovation," ''Communications of the ACM'', vol. 49, no. 7, July.
  
Laszlo, E., ed. 1972, The relevance of General Systems Theory, George Brazillier.  
+
Popper, K. R. 1979. ''Objective Knowledge'', 2nd edition. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
  
Bowler, D.T. 1981, General systems thinking: its scope and applicability”, Elsevier, Amsterdam.  
+
Salvendy, G. and W. Karwowski (eds.). 2010. ''Introduction to Service Engineering''. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley and Sons.
  
Boulding, K.E. 1996, The World as a Total System, Sage Publications, Beverly Hills.  
+
Sampson, S.E. 2001. ''Understanding Service Businesses''.  New York, NY, USA: John Wiley.
  
Skyttner, L. 1996, General Systems Theory - An Introduction, Macmillan Press, Basingstoke.
+
Spohrer, J. and P. P. Maglio. 2008. "The emergence of service science: Toward systematic service innovations to accelerate co-creation of value," ''Production and Operations Management,'' vol. 17, no.  3, pp. 238-246, cited by Spohrer, J. and P. Maglio. 2010. "Service Science: Toward a Smarter Planet," in ''Introduction to Service Engineering''. Ed. G Salvendy and W Karwowski. pp. 3-30. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
  
 +
Tien, J.M. and D. Berg. 2003. "A case for service systems engineering," ''Journal of Systems Science and Systems Engineering,'' vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 13-38.
  
====Article Discussion====
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<center>[[System Context|<- Previous Article]] | [[Systems Overview|Parent Article]] | [[Systems Thinking|Next Article ->]]</center>
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[[Category: Part 2]][[Category: Topic]][[Category:Systems Science]]
--[[User:Radcock|Radcock]] 19:15, 15 August 2011 (UTC)
 
[[Category:Part 2]][[Category:Topic]]
 

Latest revision as of 22:32, 18 November 2023


Lead Author: Rick Adcock, Contributing Authors: Scott Jackson, Janet Singer, Duane Hybertson


This article is part of the Systems Science knowledge area (KA). It describes some of the important multidisciplinary fields of research comprising systems science in historical context.

Systems science is an integrative discipline which brings together ideas from a wide range of sources which share a common systemssystems theme. Some fundamental concepts now used in systems science have been present in other disciplines for many centuries, while equally fundamental conceptsconcepts have independently emerged as recently as 40 years ago (Flood and Carson 1993).

The “Systems Problem”

Questions about the nature of systems, organizationorganization, and complexitycomplexity are not specific to the modern age. As International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE) pioneer and former International Society for System Sciences (ISSS) President John Warfield put it, “Virtually every important concept that backs up the key ideas emergent in systems literature is found in ancient literature and in the centuries that follow.” (Warfield 2006.) It was not until around the middle of the 20th Century, however, that there was a growing sense of a need for, and possibility of a scientific approach to problemsproblems of organization and complexity in a “science of systems” per se.

The explosion of knowledge in the natural and physical sciences during the 18th and 19th centuries had made the creation of specialist disciplines inevitable: in order for science to advance, there was a need for scientists to become expert in a narrow field of study. The creation of educational structures to pass on this knowledge to the next generation of specialists perpetuated the fragmentation of knowledge (M’Pherson 1973).

This increasing specialization of knowledge and education proved to be a strength rather than a weakness for problems which were suited to the prevailing scientific methods of experimental isolation and analytic reduction. However, there were areas of both basic and applied science that were not adequately served by those methods alone. The systems movement has its roots in two such areas of science: the biological-social sciences, and a mathematical-managerial base stemming first from cybernetics and operations research, and later from organizational theory.

Biologist Ludwig von Bertalanffy was one of the first to argue for and develop a broadly applicable scientific research approach based on Open System Theory (Bertalanffy 1950). He explained the scientific need for systems research in terms of the limitations of analytical procedures in science.

These limitations, often expressed as emergentemergent evolution or "the whole is more than a sum of its parts,” are based on the idea that an entity can be resolved into and reconstituted from its parts, either material or conceptual:

This is the basic principle of "classical" science, which can be circumscribed in different ways: resolution into isolable causal trains or seeking for "atomic" units in the various fields of science, etc.

He stated that while the progress of "classical" science has shown that these principles, first enunciated by Galileo and Descartes, are highly successful in a wide realm of phenomena, but two conditions are required for these principles to apply:

The first is that interactions between "parts" be non-existent or weak enough to be neglected for certain research purposes. Only under this condition, can the parts be "worked out," actually, logically, and mathematically, and then be "put together." The second condition is that the relations describing the behavior of parts be linear; only then is the condition of summativity given, i.e., an equation describing the behavior of the total is of the same form as the equations describing the behavior of the parts.

These conditions are not fulfilled in the entities called systems, i.e. consisting of parts "in interaction" and description by nonlinear mathematics. These system entities describe many real world situations: populations, eco systems, organizations and complex man made technologies. The methodological problem of systems theory is to provide for problems beyond the analytical-summative ones of classical science. (Bertalanffy 1968, 18-19)

Bertalanffy also cited a similar argument by mathematician and co-founder of information theory Warren Weaver in a 1948 American Scientist article on “Science and Complexity.” Weaver had served as Chief of the Applied Mathematics Panel at the U.S. Office of Scientific Research and Development during WWII. Based on those experiences, he proposed an agenda for what he termed a new “science of problems of organized complexitycomplexity.”

Weaver explained how the mathematical methods which had led to great successes of science to date were limited to problems where appropriate simplifying assumptions could be made. What he termed “problems of simplicity” could be adequately addressed by the mathematics of mechanics, while “problems of disorganized complexity” could be successfully addressed by the mathematics of statistical mechanics. But with other problems, making the simplifying assumptions in order to use the methods would not lead to helpful solutionssolutions. Weaver placed in this category problems such as, how the genetic constitution of an organism expresses itself in the characteristics of the adult, and to what extent it is safe to rely on the free interplay of market forces if one wants to avoid wide swings from prosperity to depression. He noted that these were complexcomplex problems which involved “analyzing systems which are organic wholes, with their parts in close interrelation.”

These problems-and a wide range of similar problems in the biological, medical, psychological, economic, and political sciences-are just too complicated to yield to the old nineteenth century techniques which were so dramatically successful on two-, three-, or four-variable problems of simplicity. These new problems, moreover, cannot be handled with the statistical techniques so effective in describing average behavior in problems of disorganized complexity [problems with elements exhibiting random or unpredictable behavior].

These new critical global problems require science to make a third great advance,

An advance that must be even greater than the nineteenth-century conquest of problems of simplicity or the twentieth-century victory over problems of disorganized complexity. Science must, over the next 50 years, learn to deal with these problems of organized complexity [problems for which complexity “emerges” from the coordinated interaction between its parts]. (Weaver 1948.)

Weaver identified two grounds for optimism in taking on this great challenge: 1.) developments in mathematical modelingmodeling and digital simulationsimulation, and 2.) the success during WWII of the “mixed team” approach of operations analysis, where individuals from across disciplines brought their skills and insights together to solve critical, complex problems.

The importance of modeling and simulation and the importance of working across disciplinary boundaries have been the key recurring themes in development of this “third way” science for systems problems of organized complexity.

The Development of Systems Research

The following overview of the evolution of systems science is broadly chronological, but also follows the evolution of different paradigmsparadigms in system theory.

Open Systems and General Systems Theory

General system theoryGeneral system theory (GST) attempts to formulate principlesprinciples relevant to all open systemsopen systems (Bertalanffy 1968). GST is based on the idea that correspondence relationships (homologies) exist between systems from different disciplines. Thus, knowledge about one system should allow us to reason about other systems. Many of the generic system concepts come from the investigation of GST.

In 1954, Bertalanffy co-founded, along with Kenneth Boulding (economist), Ralph Gerard (physiologist) and Anatol Rapoport (mathematician), the Society for General System Theory (renamed in 1956 to the Society for General Systems Research, and in 1988 to the International Society for the Systems Sciences).

The initial purpose of the society was "to encourage the development of theoretical systems which are applicable to more than one of the traditional departments of knowledge ... and promote the unity of science through improving the communication among specialists." (Bertalanffy 1968.)

This group is considered by many to be the founders of System Age Thinking (Flood 1999).

Cybernetics

CyberneticsCybernetics was defined by Wiener, Ashby and others as the study and modeling of communication, regulation, and controlcontrol in systems (Ashby 1956; Wiener 1948). Cybernetics studies the flow of information through a system and how information is used by the system to control itself through feedback mechanisms. Early work in cybernetics in the 1940s was applied to electronic and mechanical networks, and was one of the disciplines used in the formation of early systems theory. It has since been used as a set of founding principles for all of the significant system disciplines.

Some of the key concepts of feedback and control from Cybernetics are expanded in the Concepts of Systems Thinking article.

Operations Research

Operations ResearchOperations Research (OR) considers the use of technology by an organization. It is based on the use of mathematical modeling and statistical analysis to optimize decisions on the deployment of the resources under an organization's control. An interdisciplinary approach based on scientific methods, OR arose from military planning techniques developed during World War II.

Operations Research and Management Science (ORMS) was formalized in 1950 by Ackoff and Churchman applying the ideas and techniques of OR to organizations and organizational decisions (Churchman et. al. 1950).

Systems Analysis

Systems analysis was developed by RAND Corporation in 1948. It borrowed from and extended OR, including using black boxes and feedback loops from cybernetics to construct block diagrams and flow graphs. In 1961, the Kennedy Administration decreed that systems analysis techniques should be used throughout the government to provide a quantitative basis for broad decision-making problems, combining OR with cost analysis (Ryan 2008).

Systems Dynamics

Systems dynamics (SD) uses some of the ideas of cybernetics to consider the behaviorbehavior of systems as a whole in their environmentenvironment. SD was developed by Jay Forrester in the 1960’s (Forrester 1961). He was interested in modeling the dynamic behavior of systems such as populations in cities and industrial supply chains. See Systems Approaches for more details.

SD is also used by Senge (1990) in his influential book The Fifth Discipline. This book advocates a systems thinking approach to organization and also makes extensive use of SD notions of feedback and control.

Organizational Cybernetics

Stafford Beer was one of the first to take a cybernetics approach to organizations (Beer 1959). For Beer, the techniques of ORMS are best applied in the context of an understanding of the whole system. Beer also developed a Viable Systems Model (Beer 1979), which encapsulates the effective organization needed for a system to be viableviable (to survive and adapt in its environment).

Works in cybernetics and ORMS consider the mechanism for communication and control in complex systems, and particularly in organizations and management sciences. They provide useful approaches for dealing with operational and tactical problems within a system, but do not allow consideration of more strategic organizational problems (Flood 1999).

Hard and Soft Systems Thinking

Action research is an approach, first described by Kurt Lewin, as a reflective process of progressive problem solving in which reflection on action leads to a deeper understanding of what is going on and to further investigation (Lewin 1958).

Peter Checkland’s action research program in the 1980‘s led to an Interpretative-Based Systemic Theory which seeks to understand organizations by not only observing the actions of people, but also by building understandings of the cultural contextcontext, intentions and perceptions of the individuals involved. Checkland, himself starting from a systems engineeringsystems engineering (SE) perspective, successively observed the problems in applying a SE approach to the more fuzzy, ill-defined problems found in the social and political arenas (Checkland 1978). Thus, he introduced a distinction between hard systems and soft systems - see also Systems Approaches.

Hard systemsHard systems views of the world are characterized by the ability to define purposespurposes, goals, and missionsmissions that can be addressed via engineeringengineering methodologies in an attempt to, in some sense, “optimize” a solution.

In hard system approaches, the problems may be complex and difficult but they are known and can be fully expressed by the investigator. Such problems can be solved by selecting from the best available solutions (possibly with some modification or integrationintegration to create an optimum solution). In this context, the term "systems" is used to describe real world things; a solution system is selected, created and then deployed to solve the problem.

Soft systemsSoft systems views of the world are characterized by complex, problematical, and often mysterious phenomena for which concrete goals cannot be established and which require learning in order to make improvement. Such systems are not limited to the social and political arenas and also exist within and amongst enterprisesenterprises where complex, often ill-defined patterns of behavior are observed that are limiting the enterprise's ability to improve.

Soft system approaches reject the idea of a single problem and consider problematic situations in which different people will perceive different issues depending upon their own viewpoint and experience. These problematic situations are not solved but managed through interventions which seek to reduce "discomfort" among the participants. The term system is used to describe systems of ideas, conceptual systems which guide our understanding of the situation, or help in the selection of intervention strategies.

These three ideas of “problem vs. problematic situation,” “solution vs. discomfort reduction,” and “the system vs. systems understanding” encapsulate the differences between hard and soft approaches (Flood and Carson 1993).

Critical Systems Thinking

The development of a range of hard and soft methods naturally leads to the question of which method to apply in what circumstances (Jackson 1989). Critical systems thinkingCritical systems thinking (CST), or critical management science (Jackson 1985), attempts to deal with this question.

The word critical is used in two ways. Firstly, critical thinking considers the limits of knowledge and investigates the limits and assumptions of hard and soft systems, as discussed in the above sections. The second aspect of critical thinking considers the ethical, political and coercive dimension and the role of system thinking in society; see also Systems Approaches.

Service Science and Service Systems Engineering

The world economies have transitioned over the past few decades from manufacturing economies that provide goods, to service based economies. Harry Katzan defined the newly emerging field of service science: "Service science is defined as the application of scientific, engineering, and management competencies that a service-provider organization performs that creates value for the benefit of the client or customer" (Katzan 2008, vii).

The disciplines of service science and service engineering have developed to support this expansion and are built on principles of systems thinking but applied to the development and delivery of service systemsservice systems.

Service Systems Engineering is described more fully in the Service Systems Engineering KA in Part 4 of the SEBoK.

References

Works Cited

Ackoff, R.L. 1971. "Towards a system of systems concepts," Management Science, vol. 17, no. 11.

Ashby, W. R. 1956. Introduction to Cybernetics. London, UK: Methuen.

Beer, S. 1959. Cybernetics and Management. London, UK: English Universities; New York: Wiley and Sons.

Beer, S. 1979. The Heart of the Enterprise. Chichester, UK: Wiley.

Bertalanffy, L. von. 1950. "The theory of open systems in physics and biology," Science, New Series, vol. 111, no. 2872, Jan 13, pp. 23-29.

Bertalanffy, L. von. 1968. General System Theory: Foundations, Development, Applications, Revised ed. New York, NY, USA: Braziller.

Checkland, P. 1978. "The origins and nature of “hard” systems thinking," Journal of Applied Systems Analysis, vol. 5, no. 2, pp. 99-110.

Checkland, P. 1999. Systems Thinking, Systems Practice, New York, NY, USA: John Wiley & Sons.

Churchman, C.W. 1968. The Systems Approach. New York, NY, USA: Dell Publishing.

Churchman, C.W., R.L. Ackoff. and E.L. Arnoff. 1950. Introduction to Operations Research. New York, NY, USA: Wiley and Sons.

Flood, R.L. 1999. Rethinking the Fifth Discipline: Learning within the Unknowable. London, UK: Routledge.

Flood, R.L. and E.R. Carson. 1993. Dealing with Complexity: An Introduction to the Theory and Application of Systems Science, 2nd ed. New York, NY, USA: Plenum Press.

Forrester, J. 1961. Industrial Dynamics. Cambridge, MA, USA: MIT Press.

Jackson, M. 1985. "Social systems theory and practice: The need for a critical approach," International Journal of General Systems, vol. 10, pp. 135-151.

Jackson, M. 1989. "Which systems methodology when? Initial results from a research program." In: R. Flood, M. Jackson and P. Keys (eds). Systems Prospects: The Next Ten Years of Systems Research. New York, NY, USA: Plenum.

Jackson, M. 2003. Systems Thinking: Creating Holisms for Managers. Chichester, UK: Wiley.

Katzan, H. 2008. Service Science. Bloomington, IN, USA: iUniverse Books.

Lewin, K. 1958. Group Decision and Social Change. New York, NY, USA: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. p. 201.

Magee, C. L., O.L. de Weck. 2004. "Complex system classification." Proceedings of the 14th Annual International Council on Systems Engineering International Symposium, Toulouse, France, 20-24 June 2004.

M’Pherson, P, K. 1974. "A perspective on systems science and systems philosophy," Futures, vol. 6, no. 3, June 1974, pp. 219-239.

Miller, J.G. 1986. "Can systems theory generate testable hypothesis?: From Talcott Parsons to living systems theory," Systems Research, vol. 3, pp. 73-84.

Ryan, A. 2008. “What is a systems approach?” Journal of Nonlinear Science.

Senge, P.M. 1990. The Fifth Discipline: The Art & Practice of the Learning Organization. New York, NY, USA: Doubleday Business.

Weaver, W. 1948. “Science and complexity,” American Scientist, vol. 36, pp. 536-544.

Wiener, N. 1948. Cybernetics or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine. Paris, France: Hermann & Cie Editeurs; Cambridge, MA, USA: The Technology Press; New York, NY, USA: John Wiley & Sons Inc.

Primary References

Bertalanffy, L. von. 1968. General System Theory: Foundations, Development, Applications, Revised ed. New York, NY, USA: Braziller.

Chang, C.M., 2010. Service Systems Management and Engineering: Creating Strategic Differentiation and Operational Excellence. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley and Sons.

Checkland, P. 1999. Systems Thinking, Systems Practice. New York, NY, USA: John Wiley & Sons.

Flood, R. L. 1999. Rethinking the Fifth Discipline: Learning within the Unknowable. London, UK: Routledge.

Jackson, M. 1985. "Social systems theory and practice: The need for a critical approach," International Journal of General Systems, vol. 10, pp. 135-151.

Additional References

Ackoff, R.L. 1981. Creating the Corporate Future. New York, NY, USA: Wiley and Sons.

Blanchard, B.S., and W.J. Fabrycky. 2005. Systems Engineering and Analysis, 4th ed. Prentice-Hall International Series in Industrial and Systems Engineering. Englewood Cliffs, NJ, USA: Prentice-Hall.

Bowler, D.T. 1981. General Systems Thinking: Its Scope and Applicability. Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Elsevier.

Boulding, K.E. 1996. The World as a Total System. Beverly Hills, CA, USA: Sage Publications.

Hitchins, D. 2007. Systems Engineering: A 21st Century Systems Methodology. Hoboken, NJ, USA: Wiley.

Laszlo, E. (ed). 1972. The Relevance of General Systems Theory. New York, NY, USA: George Brazillier.

Skyttner, L. 1996. General Systems Theory - An Introduction. Basingstoke, UK: Macmillan Press.

Warfield, J.N. 2006. An Introduction to Systems Science. Singapore: World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte Ltd. Chang, C.M. 2010. Service Systems Management and Engineering: Creating Strategic Differentiation and Operational Excellence. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley and Sons.

Lusch, R.F. and S. L. Vargo (Eds). 2006. The Service-Dominant Logic of Marketing: Dialog, Debate, and Directions. Armonk, NY: ME Sharpe Inc.

Maglio P., S. Srinivasan, J.T. Kreulen, and J. Spohrer. 2006. “Service Systems, Service Scientists, SSME, and Innovation," Communications of the ACM, vol. 49, no. 7, July.

Popper, K. R. 1979. Objective Knowledge, 2nd edition. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.

Salvendy, G. and W. Karwowski (eds.). 2010. Introduction to Service Engineering. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley and Sons.

Sampson, S.E. 2001. Understanding Service Businesses. New York, NY, USA: John Wiley.

Spohrer, J. and P. P. Maglio. 2008. "The emergence of service science: Toward systematic service innovations to accelerate co-creation of value," Production and Operations Management, vol. 17, no. 3, pp. 238-246, cited by Spohrer, J. and P. Maglio. 2010. "Service Science: Toward a Smarter Planet," in Introduction to Service Engineering. Ed. G Salvendy and W Karwowski. pp. 3-30. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Tien, J.M. and D. Berg. 2003. "A case for service systems engineering," Journal of Systems Science and Systems Engineering, vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 13-38.


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