Systems Thinking
Systems thinking refers to the practical application of systems ideas to address or prevent complex environmental, social and organisational issues. It is as much about dialogue and collaboration as what happens in our minds (Ulrich 1983), and it takes place in contexts of action (Midgley 2008). (Source: Midgley & Rajagopalan, 2020).
Systems thinking is a way of making sense of the world's complexity by looking at it in terms of wholes and relationships rather than splitting it into parts. It has been used to explore and develop effective action in complex contexts, enabling systems to change. Systems thinking draws on and contributes to Systems Theory and the System Sciences.
Classical approach | * Informed by a single disciplinary perspective; i.e., restricted by relatively arbitrary disciplinary boundaries (von Bertalanffy 1956, Boulding 1956).
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Systems Thinking | * Transdisciplinary: Focus is on defining and redefining systems without conforming to disciplinary boundaries (von Bertalanffy 1968, Bailey 2001, Midgley 2001a).
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Reductionist scientific and management methods embody two other potentially pernicious assumptions
Mechanism and subject/object dualism often walk hand in hand, as the former involves the denial of agency to human beings, which is consistent with removing the knowing subject (who has agency) from the picture.
Mechanism | * Viewing the world as a predictable machine (Prigogine 1987), where human beings are regarded as mindless cogs within it instead of self-conscious actors whose choices (based on subjectively or inter-subjectively relevant purposes and values) may be different to those that a supposed 'expert' might make.
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Subject/object dualism | * Conceptual splitting of the ‘subject’ (who observes things and is the holder of knowledge about them) from the ‘object’ (which is observed and known).
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The following are Frameworks and methodologies for systems thinking:
- System Dynamics (SD) developed originally in the late 1950s by Jay Forrester.
- Viable Systems Model (VSM) developed originally in the late 1960s by Stafford Beer.
- Strategic Options Development and Analysis (SODA: with cognitive mapping) developed originally in the 1970s by Colin Eden.
- Soft Systems Methodology (SSM) developed originally in the 1970s by Peter Checkland.
- Critical Systems Heuristics (CSH) was developed originally in the late 1970s by Werner Ulrich.
- Critical Systems Thinking developed by Mingers and Jackson in the 80s.
- Systemic Design
References
- Jackson, Michael C (1982). "The nature of soft systems thinking: the work of Churchman, Ackoff and Checkland". Journal of Applied Systems Analysis. 9: 17–28.
- Midgley G (2008) Systems thinking, complexity and the philosophy of science. Emergence: Complexity and Organization 10(4):55-73
- Midgley, G., & Rajagopalan, R. (2020). Critical systems thinking, systemic intervention, and beyond. Handbook of Systems Sciences, 1-51.
- Mingers, J (1980). "Towards an appropriate social theory for applied systems thinking: critical theory and soft systems methodology". Journal of Applied Systems Analysis. 7: 41–49.
- Jackson, Michael C (1985). "Social systems theory and practice: the need for a critical approach". International Journal of General Systems. 10: 135–151.
- Ulrich W (1983) Critical heuristics of social planning: A new approach to practical philosophy. Haupt, Berne