Updated rough draft systems | complexity | cybernetics reading list

See my post on LinkedIn (replicated below) and join the discussion there:
https://www.linkedin.com/posts/antlerboy_rough-draft-systemscomplexitycybernetics-activity-7246779585235664896-64Xz

pdf: https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/85zlt0t6ph8qarx7d7gic/2024-09-27-rough-draft-systems-thinking-reading-list-v1.1BT.pdf?rlkey=3rfavacsy4n6sl8j0pyedph1q&st=qagh1418&dl=0
Commentable Google Doc: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Tt8GgQQj4Qw4HnR7DxKeF370o_HlDlpv/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=115526108239573817578&rtpof=true&sd=true

How do you get into systems | complexity | cybernetics?

Here’s my rough reading list.

There are a lot of answers to the question, many of them connecting with some kind of disjointing break from ‘normal’ ways of seeing and being. Anything from being bullied at school to being dyslexic. Being in an outsider group. Naively applying thinking from one domain to another. Studying a technical problem long enough to suddenly see it in a completely different light – then either have your breakthrough celebrated or rejected.

It isn’t some mystic thing and it doesn’t require to you break from polite society. But it is one of the richest, weirdest, most diverse and challenging, inspiring and confounding, confronting and validating things you can study.

I’m often asked for a reading list for people interested in the field, and I usually suck my teeth. Some of the books are engaging, insightful, humorous, relevant. Others are dry as old twigs but less likely to kindle a spark.

Really, it depends on you and your context – as David Ing says, it’s better to talk of the thinkers and their individual constellations of interests, history, learning, and personal tendencies than it is to talk of schools and fields and separate places.

And even presenting this reading list, I’d say that I’d recommend Terry Pratchett, Douglas Adams, Ursula K Le Guin, Italo Calvino, Jorge Luis Borges, Star Trek, old 20th Century Sci-Fi and Apartheid-era South African writing, art movies and music more – if you happen to be a bit like me. You’ll find your thing, if you’re interested.

But. The books are there – and many of them are *really good*. Top ones I’d recommend came out this decade

  • Hoverstadt’s Grammar of Systems
  • Jackson’s Critical Systems Thinking: A practitioner’s Guide
  • Opening the box – a slim little thing from SCiO colleagues
  • Essential Balances by Velitchkov

The attached list is a bit systems-practice focused. It is also too long and incomplete and partial simply for lack of time and energy.

There are *so many* flavours of systems thinking / complexity / cybernetics – do yourself a favour and don’t flog through stuff that doesn’t work for you, find things that bring your mind alive. Start with the articles and skim through.

But do start, because you will find in here the thinking and tools to find better ways of doing things for organisations, societies, the ecosystem, for people – and a lot of fun.

Tip: to save the pdf, hover over the image of the first page and find the rectangle bottom right – click that and it should go full screen. Top right you’ll have a download option, which when clicked will then resolve into a download button… (which might then open in your browser, but at least as a proper pdf you can save).

So… deep breath… what would you recommend? What do you think is missing?

#systems-thinking

Critical Thinking for Improved Systemic Coaching -Assumptions & PhilosophiesAccredited Enhanced Training for Coaches Qualification – AETC – with Colin Wilson (paid) – April-October 2026 (online)

Critical Thinking for Improved Systemic Coaching –
Assumptions & Philosophies
Accredited Enhanced Training for Coaches Qualification – AETC

Coaching Programme: Critical Thinking for Improved Systemic Coaching – Assumptions and Philosophies – Coaching Membership

‘Rebraiding cybernetics and AI’ – a few thoughts on the first webinar

If #AI is powerful at producing answers, what kind of system would be capable of asking better questions than the ones we currently know how to ask?

I missed Paul Pangaro, Jill Fain Lehman and Mike van de Wijnckel’s first ‘Re-Braiding Cybernetics and AI’ symposium because I was at hashtag#STSP26. But I’ve gone through the materials – it’s important.

Jill’s framing of the split itself is powerful: cybernetics took humans as an instance of self-organising systems, AI took humans as the self-organising system of concern. Tidy; enormous consequences. It changes what you think needs explaining, what you’re allowed to assume, what’s treated as background and what as the central problem. It’s where the trouble starts.

Once you narrow the question, you can get very good at modelling, classifying, predicting, generating and optimising, while tiptoeing away from purpose, observer, boundary, context and ethics. You can become extremely clever about the banana, even the stick, while losing interest in the cage, the shelf, the zookeeper, the audience, and the poor sod’s changing sense of what counts as freedom. Heinz von Foerster said, ‘cybernetics is not the banana’.

Pangaro’s opening definition: cybernetics is about information as feedback to effective action, and about purpose as something attributed by an observer. The observer is in the picture – so, therefore, is responsibility. So intervention isn’t just technical. It’s ethical and political. A much bigger challenge than ‘can the machine do the task?’ It asks who is deciding what the task is, from which world, and with what consequences.

Mike’s thread through von Foerster and Pask was excellent. Self-organisation, in this lineage, is not a magical property or a managerial slogan. It depends on interaction, coalition, adaptation, evolving boundaries, and non-zero-sum conditions. The system can’t optimise itself into wisdom. It has to become viable through relationship. Critical for anyone working in hashtag#publicservices, where our biggest failures come from treating living systems as if they were machinery.

The re-braiding question isn’t mainly about AI research, it’s about institutional design.

That’s what’s missing from a lot of the current conversation. The strands for the next symposium are ‘representation’ and ‘process’. Fair enough. But the questions that really bite in public life are purpose, power, boundaries, legitimacy, worlds, and agency – as substance, not optional.

This could be a great project, not just for history of ideas, but to help us ask a better practical question.

What would it mean to place AI inside purposeful, accountable, learning systems rather than bolt it onto broken ones? What would it mean to design for judgement and discretion within boundaries, over time, rather than automate transactions and call it progress? What would it mean to build public systems that can see themselves, and change themselves, instead of becoming more efficient at doing the wrong thing righter?

link to the project
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1uXgkltowcKjmcLOyOQUKtv852gvq0zx1UlhT2zeabKU/edit?tab=t.0

Benjamin Taylor

From Hierarchy to Intelligence – Dorsey (2026)

[Blimey, there’s some familiar stuff here!]

jack on X: “From Hierarchy to Intelligence” / X

https://block.xyz/inside/from-hierarchy-to-intelligence

Kim Warren’s slides on Agentic AI and the self-managing etnerprise – STSP conference 2026

[Share on linkedin at the link below – with link direct to pdf in message]

Great to see such a great crowd at STSP. Feel free to share my piece about agentic AI and the self-managing enterprise. Linked-in can block external links so copy-paste this … sdl.re/AIshowITS

https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7443264705017692160/?originTrackingId=%2BiOr8sc8An2zlOaP8SMRgw%3D%3D

See also

https://sdl.re/buildAI-SME

Ontological Foundations of General Systems Theory – Challoner (2026)

[And his series of papers: https://rational-understanding.com/efgst/

and General Systems Theory course: https://rational-understanding.com/gst-course/ ]

By John A Challoner

Ontology, Applied Ontology, Systems Theory, Social Systems Theory, General Systems Theory

This paper establishes an ontological foundation for General Systems Theory by clarifying the nature of existence, entities, structure, and causality. Adopting an empirically grounded physicalist stance, it assumes that all observed phenomena occur within space-time and that there is no evidence of non-physical entities interacting with the physical universe. On this basis, reality is understood as comprising physically instantiated entities distinguished by boundaries and organised within space-time. The paper develops a systematic account of key ontological concepts. Entities may be considered individually or as sets, exhibiting duality between whole and parts. Abstract entities are reconceptualised as distributed physical configurations, understood both as sets of instances and as characteristics defining classes of entities. Structure is distinguished from configuration as the organised arrangement of entities and their relationships, and information is defined ontologically as non-random, recurring structure in space-time. Relationships are classified as configurational or causal, corresponding respectively to structural arrangement and transfer of matter, energy, or information. Events are defined as time-bounded causal interactions, and networks as interconnected systems of such events. Causality is further analysed through two complementary representations: processtransfer-process (PTP), emphasising relational interactions between systems, and transfer-process-transfer (TPT), emphasising internal transformation within systems. Finally, entities are described in terms of characteristics and states, with change understood as variation in these characteristics over time. Together, these concepts provide a coherent and physically grounded ontology that supports the analysis of systems, processes, and dynamics, and establishes a foundation for subsequent developments in structure, information, thermodynamics, and social systems theory.

https://www.academia.edu/165495501/Ontological_Foundations_of_General_Systems_Theory

Harness engineering for coding agent users – Böckeler (2026)

To let coding agents work with less supervision, we need ways to increase our confidence in their result. As software engineers, we have a natural trust barrier with AI-generated code – LLMs are non-deterministic, they don’t know our context, and they don’t really understand the code, they think in tokens. This article explores a mental model that brings together emerging concepts from context and harness engineering to build that trust.

02 April 2026


Birgitta Böckeler

Birgitta is a Distinguished Engineer and AI-assisted delivery expert at Thoughtworks. She has over 20 years of experience as a software developer, architect and technical leader.

https://martinfowler.com/articles/harness-engineering.html

SCIO’s monthly newsletter

SCIO’s March newsletter – posted in full below:

Hello and welcome to the end of March mailing from SCiO.  Please check the Events page on the website for updates https://www.systemspractice.org/events.
Please note that you are welcome to attend any event (allowing for restrictions on members-only events) so long as you speak and understand the language.

COURSES

Please remember that All thirty-one courses now on the SCiO LMS are discounted 10% to members – use the discount code MEMBER10 when booking.  The courses currently available are here.

Multi-course discounts: There is a discount of 20% for any four or more courses and 25% for considerably more. The full set of courses (including future additions) can be had with a 30% discount and this includes access to coaching.

Organisational Development Programmes: If your organisation is interested to use any or all of the courses, substantial discounts of around 50% are available and bespoke programmes can be prepared.

2026 CONFERENCE

The three-day conference: Systems Thinking Systems Practice, took place at Hull University from 24–26 March 2026. It was good to meet some of you there and I hope that you enjoyed it. SCiO was not as involved in the organisation this year and so I cannot guarantee that as much material will be made available. However, Hull have committed to making everything available that they can and this will include recordings of key note speakers and panels. Other material may be more piecemeal. We will structure it in a single page when we see what we have.

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

EVENTS – by country   (click on the name)

  SCiO Belgium   SCiO DACH
  SCiO Finland  SCiO Ireland
  SCiO Nederland  SCiO Polska
  SCiO UK 

______________________________________________________________

  SCiO UK

SCiO UK Virtual Development Event – April 2026

Tue, Apr 14th, 2026  13:00 – 15:00  GMT

SCiO’s Development Event offer an opportunity to draw upon the collective expertise of SCiO members in a friendly and supportive atmosphere. By taking Development Events online, using the Zoom meeting platform, we aim to make them accessible to more SCiO members. Development Events are both for members who are just starting out on a journey to explore Systems Thinking approaches, and for those who have many years of exploration and practice. This is a bring your issues of interest Development Event.

Members only; FREE; Online event; English  BOOK NOW

SCiO UK Virtual Open Meeting – May 2026

Mon, May 18th, 2026  18:30 – 21:00  GMT+1

Virtual Open Meeting: A series of presentations of general interest to Systems and Complexity in Organisation’s members and others. SCiO organises Open Meetings to provide opportunities for practitioners to learn and develop new practice, to build relationships, networks hear about skills, tools, practice and experiences. This virtual meeting will be held on Zoom.

All welcome; FREE; Online event; English  BOOK NOW

______________________________________________________________

  SCiO Belgium

Werkingsjaarafsluiting: Verken de grenzen van je systemisch denken aan de hand van provocatieve vragen

Tue, May 19th, 2026  19:00 – 21:00  CET+1

In deze laatste activiteit verkennen we hoe we vastgeroeste denkpatronen kunnen doorbreken en nieuwe perspectieven kunnen creëren. Door middel van provocatieve vragen onderzoeken deelnemers de grenzen van hun eigen systemische benadering verkennen en innovatieve oplossingen vinden voor complexe problemen. Enkele voorbeelden die relevant zouden kunnen zijn voor het systeem waarmee je geconfronteerd wordt:

  • “Wat als we het probleem precies tegenovergesteld zouden benaderen?”
  • “Stel dat de meest onwaarschijnlijke oplossing de juiste is, wat zou die dan zijn?”
  • “Wie zou er het meeste baat bij hebben als dit probleem niet werd opgelost?”
  • “Welke regels of aannames moeten we breken om een innovatieve oplossing te vinden?”

We vatten de avond zeer interactief op en werken in kleine groepjes, vertrekkende van de systemen waarmee de deelnemers worstelen. Het wordt een avond waarin we creatief, onconventioneel en respectvol gevoelige onderwerpen zullen omdenken.

Members only + guests; 50 euro; Kon. Astridlaan 144, 2800 Mechelen, Belgium; Dutch  BOOK NOW

______________________________________________________________

   SCiO DACH (Deutschland, Österreich, Schweiz)

Entwicklung von Komplexität sowie Arbeits- und Prozessleistung im projektbasierten Maschinenbau

Thu, Apr 23rd, 2026  19:00 – 20:30  CET+1

Zwischenergebnisse einer laufenden Dissertation zur Messbarkeit organisationaler Komplexität im industriellen Umfeld. Im Fokus: Wie nehmen operative Führungskräfte steigende Komplexität wahr – und inwieweit lässt sich diese Wahrnehmung datenbasiert im Unternehmen abbilden? Ein praxisnaher Einblick in erste Befunde, methodisches Vorgehen und weiterführende Forschungsfragen.

Entwicklung von Komplexität sowie Arbeits- und Prozessleistung im projektbasierten Maschinenbau – Carola Ritzinger-Roll

Members only + guests; kostenlos; Online event; German BOOK NOW

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  SCiO Finland

Suorituskyvyn rajat – kun ”paras” ei enää riitä

Wed, Apr 1st, 2026  16:00 – 17:30  EEST

Organisaatiot ovat yhä suorituskykyisempiä. Ne optimoivat prosesseja, asettavat tavoitteita, seuraavat mittareita ja palkitsevat onnistumista. Nämä vahvuudet eivät kuitenkaan välttämättä takaa kestävää menestystä tai organisaation elinkelpoisuutta pitkällä aikavälillä. Esityksessä tarkastellaan suorituskykyä organisoivana logiikkana sekä sen rakenteellisia rajoja. Keskustelemme siitä, miten tavoitteilla johtaminen ja suorituskyvyn optimointi menettävät tehoaan ympäristöissä, joissa epälineaarisuus lisääntyy ja arviointikriteerit muuttuvat epävakaiksi, sekä siitä, kuinka nämä rajat usein tulkitaan toimeenpanon ongelmiksi sen sijaan, että kyseenalaistettaisiin taustalla olevia perusoletuksia. Esityksessä tehdään erottelu suorituskykylogiikan ja adaptiivisen logiikan välillä. Tarkoitus ei ole hylätä suorituskykyä, vaan paikantaa sen rajat – ja avata tilaa toisenlaiselle organisoinnin logiikalle.

Suorituskyvyn rajat – kun ”paras” ei enää riitä – Janne J. Korhonen

All welcome; Free; Online event; Finnish BOOK NOW

______________________________________________________________

   SCiO Ireland 

Details of the 2026 programme not added yet. Always worth contacting the organisers through https://www.systemspractice.org/community/ireland.

______________________________________________________________

  SCiO Nederland

SCIO-NL monthly meeting April 2025 (live in Woerden and in Dutch)

Fri, Apr 3rd, 2026  12:30 – 16:00  CET

SCIO-NL komt elke 1e of 2e vrijdag van de maand live bijeen, meestal in Woerden (Pelmolenlaan 2). Er staan (meestal) geen vaste onderwerpen op de agenda (daarvoor organiseren we specifieke andere meetings), maar de ervaring leert dat er altijd wel een interessant gesprek op gang komt over een systemisch onderwerp. Toegankelijk voor iedereen die de jaarlijkse fee voor de live-bijeenkomsten (€50,-) hiervoor betaald. En voor KNVI-leden. En voor gasten. Neem contact op via ed@doitogether.nl als je interesse hebt, maar nog geen lid van de club bent.

NL Members + guests; FREE; Pelmolenlaan 2, Woerden (At the Office) 5, Woerden, Netherlands;  Dutch  BOOK NOW

SCIO-NL monthly meeting May 2025 (live in Woerden and in Dutch)

Fri, May 1st, 2026  12:30 – 16:00  CET

SCIO-NL komt elke 1e of 2e vrijdag van de maand live bijeen, meestal in Woerden (Pelmolenlaan 2). Er staan (meestal) geen vaste onderwerpen op de agenda (daarvoor organiseren we specifieke andere meetings), maar de ervaring leert dat er altijd wel een interessant gesprek op gang komt over een systemisch onderwerp. Toegankelijk voor iedereen die de jaarlijkse fee voor de live-bijeenkomsten (€50,-) hiervoor betaald. En voor KNVI-leden. En voor gasten. Neem contact op via ed@doitogether.nl als je interesse hebt, maar nog geen lid van de club bent.

NL Members + guests; FREE; Pelmolenlaan 2, Woerden (At the Office) 5, Woerden, Netherlands;  Dutch  BOOK NOW

______________________________________________________________

  SCiO Polska

Please check website for meetings.

Steve Hales

Membership Secretary, Treasurer, Online

SCiO – Systems & Complexity in Organisation

The Professional Body for Systems Practitioners

VSM Mapper using LLM from Recursive Systems

https://recursive.systems/

The systems framing: Beyond the 2×2 and why Operating Model Design needs Cybernetic First Principles – Aziz (2026)

Abdul Aziz
Strategy & Performance through Empathy, Architecture and Analytics


March 28, 2026

The systems framing: Beyond the 2×2 and why Operating Model Design needs Cybernetic First Principles | LinkedIn
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/systems-framing-beyond-22-why-operating-model-design-needs-abdul-aziz-groje/?trackingId=Gdp1cJh%2FSVAHBD03fgla7A%3D%3D

At #STSP26 I argued systems practice is a humanism – Taylor (2026)

Reflections on Systems Thinking Systems Practice – 2026 Conference – Raghavan (2026)

[Requires one of those infernal ‘now check your email’ logins but the trick is to just keep registering – even if already registered – to read the full article]

Pluralistic and Multi-perspective!

Laksh Raghavan

Reflections on Systems Thinking Systems Practice – 2026 Conference
Pluralistic and Multi-perspective!


Laksh Raghavan

Reflections on Systems Thinking Systems Practice – 2026 Conference
https://www.cyb3rsyn.com/p/reflections-on-systems-thinking-systems-practice-2026-conference

Review | A calculus for self-reference – Diaz (2026)


Since Aristotle, we have attempted to avoid self-causation, giving rise to ontic dualisms, Gödel’s incompleteness theorems, and pancomputationalism. In this article, Francisco Varela develops an alternative axiomatic paradigm whose arithmetic and algebra allow us to address self-reference. The implications and interpretation of employing such an alternative mathematical foundation are remarkable, and that is why I will examine it today.

Posted Mar 17, 2026
By Amahury J. L. Díaz

Review | A calculus for self-reference | Complexity Cat
https://www.complexitycat.org/posts/review-calculus-for-self-reference/

Reflective Interpretive Frameworks • Incident 1

Re: William Waites • The Agent That Doesn’t Know Itself

WW:  ❝Why Has Nobody Done This?❞

People who study C.S. Peirce would say reflective reasoning requires triadic relations at core and there is work being done on that.  One of the challenges is clarifying the role of triadic relations in category theory and raising them into higher relief as fundamental operations.

  • Note.  I was looking for a word to describe a random encounter with something that jogs one’s memory of a recurring theme — incident plays into the reflection theme and looked worth trying for now.

Resources

cc: Academia.eduCyberneticsLaws of FormMathstodon
cc: Research GateStructural ModelingSystems ScienceSyscoi

#arithmetization, #c-s-peirce, #godel-numbers, #higher-order-sign-relations, #inquiry-driven-systems, #inquiry-into-inquiry, #logic, #mathematics, #quotation, #recursion, #reflection, #reflective-interpretive-frameworks, #semiotics, #sign-relations, #triadic-relations, #use-and-mention, #visualization

Rich Programmed Activity Models – Karthik Suresh (YouTube)

27 Mar 2026

A talk given at the Systems Thinking Systems Practice conference at Hull in March 2026

Rich Programmed Activity Models

Karthik Suresh

A talk given at the Systems Thinking Systems Practice conference at Hull in March 2026

Rich Programmed Activity Models – YouTube

Toward a Critical Agentic Systems Design Practice – Salvaggio (2026)


Eryk Salvaggio
22 Mar 2026 — 7 min read

Toward a Critical Agentic Systems Design Practice
https://mail.cyberneticforests.com/toward-a-critical-agentic-systems-design-practice/