Systems theory is the study of the nature of systems in nature, society, and science. More specifically, systems theory is a framework to analyze or describe any group of things which work together to produce some result. This can be a single organism, any organization or society, or any electronic, mechanical or informational artifact.
Systems theory as a technical and general academic area of study. It was founded by Ludwig von Bertalanffy and others in the 1950s.
Related pages
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System types | |
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| Concepts | |
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Theoretical fields | |
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| Scientists |
- Manfred Clynes
- Edsger W. Dijkstra
- Alexander Bogdanov
- Russell L. Ackoff
- William Ross Ashby
- Ruzena Bajcsy
- Béla H. Bánáthy
- Gregory Bateson
- Anthony Stafford Beer
- Richard E. Bellman
- Ludwig von Bertalanffy
- Margaret Boden
- Kenneth E. Boulding
- Murray Bowen
- Kathleen Carley
- Mary Cartwright
- C. West Churchman
- George Dantzig
- Fred Emery
- Heinz von Foerster
- Stephanie Forrest
- Jay Wright Forrester
- Barbara Grosz
- Charles A. S. Hall
- Mike Jackson
- Lydia Kavraki
- James J. Kay
- Faina M. Kirillova
- George Klir
- Allenna Leonard
- Edward Norton Lorenz
- Niklas Luhmann
- Humberto Maturana
- Margaret Mead
- Donella Meadows
- Mihajlo D. Mesarovic
- James Grier Miller
- Radhika Nagpal
- Howard T. Odum
- Talcott Parsons
- Ilya Prigogine
- Qian Xuesen
- Anatol Rapoport
- John Seddon
- Peter Senge
- Claude Shannon
- Katia Sycara
- Eric Trist
- Francisco Varela
- Manuela M. Veloso
- Kevin Warwick
- Norbert Wiener
- Jennifer Wilby
- Anthony Wilden
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| Applications |
- Systems theory in anthropology
- Systems theory in archaeology
- Systems theory in political science
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| Organizations |
- Principia Cybernetica
- List
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