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## Why did I want to read it?
## What did I get out of it?
### tl;dr
## Chapter One: The Basics
System = elements + interconnections + purpose
> A **system** is an interconnected set of elements that is coherently organized in a way that achieves something. (p. 13)
Relationships are hard to see, but purposes are harder. They are not usually explicitly stated. However, they are most critical determinants of the system's behavior.
> Keeping sub-purposes and overall systems purposes in harmony is an essential function of successful systems (p. 16)
Reminds me a lot to [[Extreme programming explained|Extreme Programming Explained]] and the [[Theory of constraints|Theory Of Constraints]]: ![[Extreme programming explained#^da43d6]]
>System thinkers see the world as a collection of stocks along with the mechanisms for regulating the levels in the stocks by manipulating flows. That means system thinkers see the world as a collection of **feedback processes**.
(balancing loops and reinforcing loops, system zoo)
## Part two: Systems and Us
If the biota, in the course of aeons
has built something we like but do not understand, then who but a
fool would discard seemingly useless parts? To keep every cog and
wheel is the first precaution of intelligent tinkering.
-Aldo Leopold, forester
Characteristics of a good functioning system:
- Resilience
>not the same thing as being static or constant over time (p. 77)
Systems
need
to
be
managed not only
for
productivity
or
stabil-
ity, they also need to be
managed for resilience-
the ability to recover from
perturbation, the ability to
restore or repair themselves. (P. 78)
Self org: learn and evolve
Like resilience, self-organization is often sacrificed for purposes of
short-term productivity and stability. Productivity and stability are the
usual excuses for turning creative human beings into mechanical adjuncts
to production processes. Or for narrowing the genetic variability of crop
plants. Or for establishing bureaucracies and theories of knowledge that
treat people as if they were only numbers (p.79)
Self-organization produces heterogeneity and unpredictability (...)
These conditions that encourage self-organization often can be scan
for individuals and threatening to power structures (p. 80)
INSERT HERE A SUMMARY OF THE WHOLE HIERARCHY
The original
purpose of a hierarchy is always to help its originating subsystems do their
jobs better. This is something, unfortunately, that both the higher and the
lower levels of a greatly articulated hierarchy easily can forget. Therefore,
many systems are not meeting our goals because of malfunctioning hier-
archies.(P. 84)
When a subsystem's goals dominate at the expense of the total system's
goals, the resulting behavior is called suboptimization.
Just as damaging as suboptimization, of course, is the problem of too
much central control. (P.85)
### Why Systems Surprise Us
> You can't navigate well in an
interconnected, feedback-dominated world unless you take your eyes off
short-term events and look for long-term behavior and structure; unless
you are aware of false boundaries and bounded rationality; unless you take
into account limiting factors, nonlinearities and delays. You are likely to
mistreat, misdesign, or misread systems if you don't respect their proper-
ties of resilience, self-organization, and hierarchy (p. 87)