Brian Eno and cybernetics – link collection

[Today’s SCiO open event – https://stream.syscoi.com/2025/01/29/cybernetics-and-music-links-and-scio-uk-virtual-open-meeting-july-2025-online-free/ – let me to get these Eno and cybernetics links – and previous SysCoI links at base]

Four Conversations with Brian Eno – Frank Rose

Eno describes cybernetics as his “secret career” and discusses his 1997 article “Generating and Organizing Variety in the Arts,” which draws directly from adaptive-systems thinking programmablemutter.com+15Frank Rose+15Henry Jenkins+15.

Brian Eno, Peter Schmidt, and Cybernetics – Rhizome

Shows how Eno—from art school onward—applied cybernetic ideas to group dynamics in the studio and tape-loop processes, drawing inspiration from Stafford Beer’s managerial systems researchspace.bathspa.ac.uk+5Rhizome+5Henry Jenkins+5.

• Interview with Geeta Dayal (via Henry Jenkins)

Eno reflects on his 1960s art-school education (Roy Ascott’s “Groundcourse”) and how theorists like Ashby, Pask, and Beer shaped his thinking Rhizome+6Henry Jenkins+6moredarkthanshark.org+6.

How Norbert Wiener Invented Cybernetics and Brian Eno – Dazed

Details how Wiener’s and Beer’s work influenced Eno’s creative processes, including ambient pieces that rely on feedback loops Frank Rose+2Dazed Digital+2Rhizome+2.

• More Dark Than Shark Interviews


📑 Supplementary Papers & Essays

  • “Living World Dynamics – or What Brian Eno Can Teach Us…” (Nordes)
    Explores Eno’s use of Stafford Beer’s phrase: “ride on the dynamics of the system in the direction you want to go”, demonstrating how cybernetics shaped his creative method The Crypto Syllabus+5archive.nordes.org+5WIRED+5.
  • ResearchSpace PDF on “Cybernetic systems of music creation”
    Considers how Eno (and David Byrne) applied systems thinking—drawing on Wiener & Beer—to generative music researchspace.bathspa.ac.uk.

🎧 Bonus Resource


🔗 Quick-Access Links

Previous links:

Enduring Patterns, Emerging Futures – Celebrating the Legacy and Vision of Dr. Len Troncale – Systems Process Theory – 12-21 September 2025, online. free

📅 12–21 September 2025
📍 Online via Zoom
💸 Free and open to all

An international, online gathering of students, researchers, and systems thinkers exploring Systems Process Theory and celebrating the lifetime contribution of Dr. Len Troncale.

What to expect:

Talks, panels, and hands-on workshops

Networking with fellow systems thinkers

Abstract submissions welcome (ideas, talks, workshops)

🔗 Register & submit your abstract at https://troncale.sched.com
🔗 More about Dr. Troncale and Systems Process Theory https://lentroncale.com

Transmaterial Worlding. Beyond Human Systems – Simon and Salter (2019)

[An example, recently shared on LinkedIn, of the ‘most popular papers’ from the Murmurations Journal]

https://murmurations.cloud/index.php/pub/index

Published: Dec 31, 2019

DOI: https://doi.org/10.28963/2.2.2

Keywords:

systemic living, transmaterial worlding, posthuman, co-construction, co-inhabitation, new materialism

Main Article Content

Gail Simon

https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0838-5713

Leah K Salter

https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0458-5216

Abstract

In this paper we reframe systemic social construction as transmaterial worlding to include human and non-human participants. We discuss what it means to be human in the Anthropocene era with reference to posthuman new materialist theory. We introduce systemic living as onto-epistemological becoming, movement and meaning-making practices in and between human and non-human parts of our worlds. The paper discusses power relations and ways of bringing forth lost-destroyed indigenous ways of knowing which make time and space for new understandings and experimental responses to what we are making together at a local and global level. We discuss how transmaterial worlding requires a new understanding by humans to see their place in this planet as co-inhabitation. We offer examples of transmaterial worlding from across different contexts and suggest some systemic questions for how we can live ethically in a transmaterial world that honours societal, cultural, professional and other kinds of situated knowledge and know-how.

https://murmurations.cloud/index.php/pub/article/view/85

BBC In Our Time – The Evolution of Lungs

[A classic episode, with real interest in terms of thinking about evolution per se, multiple solutions to existential problems, and the evolution of complexity. Stuart Brand would probably love it! Currently listening to Ben Sweeting giving the Ranulph Glanville Lecture at the ISSS conference, to which this is tangentially relevant – how can an organisation grow ‘along Galilean lines’… we don’t know exactly what that means.

Ben’s relevant slide

]

In Our Time

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the diverse ways animals extract oxygen from air, from the highly tuned lungs that enabled dinosaurs to grow tall and birds to fly high, to buccal pumping.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m002d8t2

The Human-Centric Viable System Model (HC-VSM): A further development of the Stafford Beer VSM to integrate psychological, sociological and cultural dimensions – Slogar (2025)

https://medium.com/kybernetikum/das-human-centric-viable-system-model-hc-vsm-eine-weiterentwicklung-des-stafford-beer-vsm-zur-973710abc9a2

Article is in German – as Das Human-Centric Viable System Model (HC-VSM): Eine Weiterentwicklung des Stafford Beer VSM zur Integration psychologischer, soziologischer und kultureller Dimensionen – you will need to use translate (free in Chrome and most browsers)

Final Line-Up Announced for SysPrac25! The Systems Thinking Practitioners Conference, 3-4 September 2025, Milton Keynes UK

A white building with trees and a lawn

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

We’re thrilled to unveil the full line-up for the SysPrac25 Systems Thinking Practitioner’s Conference – two packed days of exploration, insight, and innovation in systems thinking practice.

Early Bird Discount Ends July 15 at Midnight!

Additional discounts available for apprentices and SCiO members.

👉 Secure your place now:     Book Now

With 45 speakers and 48 hours of topical content, here’s what to expect from this year’s conference:

Featured Talks, Panels & Workshops (A–Z by first presenter):

  • Chris Abbott – Building and Sustaining Complexity Capabilities in Public Service Organisations
  • Chris Abbott & Simon MacCormac – Making Missions (and Projects) Possible with Systems Thinking
  • Jaime Bainbridge – Final title TBC
  • Nick Beech – Final title TBC
  • Ollie Bream McIntosh – Systemic Investing and AI
  • Mike Burrows – Introducing the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation
  • Ken Carroll & Simon MacCormac – Collaboration and Complexity (Workshop)
  • Lauren Clarke – How Can Systems Thinking Help Tackle the High-Stakes Policy Challenge of Enabling Secure, Trusted International Collaboration in Academic Research?
  • Dr Tim Curtis – Recursive Canvases in Management Consulting: Applied Systems Thinking or Not?
  • Gareth David – Debunking the Agile Panacea – Using Systems Thinking to Explore Where Agile Will Work Well
  • Jan De Visch – Humanising Systems (Workshop)
  • Jennifer Easton-Groves – Systemic Enquiry into Operational and Cultural Behaviours in a Financially Challenged Higher Education Environment
  • Dr Anne Gambles – Thinking Differently Together: A Long-Lived Systemic Inquiry into Growing Colleagues’ Systems Thinking in Practice at The Open University
  • Jane Graham – Strengthening the Connection Between Relational Leadership and Practice with Systems Thinking
  • Alison Guthrie-Wrenn – Opening Keynote (Title TBC)
  • Panel – Reflections and Questions: Alison Guthrie-Wrenn, Patrick Hoverstadt, Dr Mike Jackson, OBE & Dr Ray Ison
  • Timo Hämäläinen & Janne J. Korhonen – Complexity Governance: Structural and Cognitive Underpinnings of Adaptive Institutions
  • Patrick Hoverstadt – Viable Systems Model (VSM): Balancing Complexity (Workshop)
  • Richard Hughes – Promoting Psychosocial Well-Being of Young People with Cancer Through Systems Thinking
  • David Ing & Zaid Khan – Pacing Changes with Living Systems: Rhythmic Threads in Textures, Rhythmic Textures of Threads
  • Dr Ray Ison – Keynote (Title TBC)
  • Panel – The Future of Systems Thinking: Dr Mike Jackson, OBE & Patrick Hoverstadt
  • Mike Jones & Carla Owens – Patterns of Strategy (POS) (Workshop)
  • Gary Kass – Understanding the Impact of Sustainability Intermediaries in Complex Adaptive Systems
  • Dr Artem Khudenko – A Sustainability Innovation Challenge: Systems Thinking Meets Design Thinking
  • Tony Korycki – Critical Systems Heuristics (CSH) (Workshop)
  • Louise Le Gat – Changing Mindsets (Workshop)
  • Simon MacCormac – Soft Systems Methodology (SSM) (Workshop)
  • Benjamin Taylor – Systemic Consulting (Workshop)
  • Carla Owens & Nicola Reeves – Making a Meaningful Impact on the System of Animal Use in Medical Research
  • Anca Popa – Overcoming Boundaries Between Stakeholders for Project Success
  • Nicola Reeves – I Wanted to Say “No” – Instead, I Said “Wait”
  • Dr Martin Reynolds – Towards ‘Requisite Systems Literacy’ for Interdisciplinary and Transdisciplinary Challenges
  • Carola Ritzinger-Roll – Cybernetic KPIs in Medium-Sized Companies – A Doctoral Project
  • Gavin Roberts – Systems Thinking Principles (Workshop)
  • Ian Rosam – Digitisation, AI, Big Data + Systems Thinking: Transforming Audits and Value Creation
  • James Stauch – Navigating Problems, Revealing Systems, and Asking Beautiful Questions
  • Robin Stowell – Boosting Organisational Performance Through Personnel Availability
  • Ed Straw – 50 Years of Systems Thinking in Government, Society and Life
  • Dr Matvei Tobman – The Viable System Model as a Framework for AI Integration in Healthcare
  • Al Walker – Regulatory Strategy Design in the Construction Products Sector
  • Dr Kim Warren – Systems Dynamics (SD) (Workshop)
  • Tom Watson – Beyond the Tool Kit (Workshop)
  • Andrea Weierich – Using Vester’s Sensitivity Model to Build a Flywheel in IT Leadership Teams
  • Ed van der Winden & Vincent van der Lubbe – Systems Practice for Everyone – Simple, but Not Easy

👉 More details here:                https://www.systemspractice.org/SYSPRAC25

We can’t wait to welcome systems thinkers from across the world to #SysPrac25. Let’s shape better futures together.

#SystemsThinking #SystemsThinkers #ProblemSolving #Innovation

Why Reform Fails When It Forgets the Ghost Layer – red flower (2025)

by red flower | Jul 7, 2025 | The Alternate Feed | 0 comments

Video:

Teach Yourself Systems – Saviu (2025(?))

Welcome to TYS, an interactive learning resource focused on systems thinking and systems engineering. In a world of abundant intelligence, systems thinking is becoming more important than ever. This site aims to help you understand complex systems, their interactions, and how to design and manage them effectively.

https://teachyourselfsystems.com/about

https://teachyourselfsystems.com/

The Burden: Love, Logic, and the Lonely Space Between – A book for those who debug hearts like code and can’t stop trying to understand why – Tutt (2025)

By The Civil Rights Engineer Who Heals Through Documentation

Published by Caia Tech

https://theburden.org/

Staying Alive: Patterns for Failure Management from the Bottom of the Ocean | Ronnie Chen

h/t Jonathan Yu @jawnsy@mastodon.social who says

https://mastodon.social/@jawnsy/114803028953613302a

A classic talk about systems thinking, as told through a story of ocean diving.

Some key observations:

1. Catastrophic failures in complex systems are the result of several smaller failures

2. An unused or untested safety system does not exist

3. Normalization of deviance is a natural human phenomenon

https://youtu.be/kW5_wkJJf3A by Ronnie Chen via DevOpsCon

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kW5_wkJJf3A

Ellen MacArthur Foundation, UWC and IB Collaborate on New Complexity Module for International Baccalaureate (Kupers, 2017)

4 January 2018

Blog entry

https://www.uwc.org/news/?pid=22&nid=7&storyid=2120

Document

Complex Adaptive Systems: Thinking differently about child protection – Bruce (2025)

Launch LinkedIn post: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/centre-for-relational-care_at-the-centre-for-relational-care-we-talk-activity-7345338712643260417-QHLG

And the Center’s Knowledge Hub: https://www.centreforrelationalcare.org.au/knowledge-hub


Complex Adaptive Systems: Thinking differently about child protection by Sophi Bruce, CEO Centre for Relational Care

Complex Adaptive Systems

This thought piece challenges the idea that the child protection system is broken – instead, it’s doing what it was designed to do. The system tends to self-correct, absorbing change and reinforcing familiar norms and mindsets. 

Drawing on insights from complex adaptive systems, the piece outlines four key shifts needed to move from ‘compliance’ to ‘connection’: supporting families as living systems, transforming organisational culture, confronting the system’s deep foundations, and rethinking what we value and measure.

If we want better outcomes, we need to shift the conditions that drive behaviour. This work is already happening, led by families, young people, and communities.

Values In Action: A Critical Systems Heuristics Workbook – Bob Williams (2025)

https://bobwilliams.gumroad.com/l/valuesinaction

Values In Action: A Critical Systems Heuristics Workbook

$0+

Bob Williams

Values in Action is a hands-on, thought-provoking and practical workbook designed to equip people with tools to explore, question, and strengthen the ethical and practical foundations of their and others’ decision-making.

The purpose of the workbook is to enable you and others make well-grounded claims that whatever you are doing is the right thing to do. That claim to ‘rightness’ is, individually and collectively, yours and will almost certainly be challenged. Critical Systems Heuristics helps you to engage constructively and ethically with those challenges. It will help you identify and determine whether the key decisions made by every intervention, strategy, plan, evaluation or policy were, are or will be the right thing to do.

Grounded in Critical Systems Heuristics (CSH), the workbook helps you to identify whose values shape an intervention, who or what benefits from them, who or what doesn’t benefit, what knowledge is prioritised, and what legitimises and sustains that intervention. Whether used on your own or as part of a team, the CSH framework is useful for anyone working in complex environments who wants to better navigate ambiguity, power, and competing perspectives.

The workbook is useful for any intervention, including strategy, evaluation, planning and policy.

For Strategy:

Strategic decisions are often made under uncertainty, where competing visions of success and hidden value judgments can derail progress. Values in Action provides a structured method to clarify what truly matters, examine who benefits, and ensure that strategies are not only efficient but ethically grounded. By distinguishing between what is and what ought to be, this workbook supports long-term thinking that aligns with diverse stakeholder aspirations and adaptive learning.

For Evaluation:

Evaluation is more than just assessing outcomes. It is about understanding merit, worth, and significance. This workbook frames evaluation as a value determined practice, and guides evaluators through exercises that expose whose values are embedded in evaluation questions, methods, and interpretations. It is especially powerful in complex, contested, or cross-cultural settings where conventional evaluation approaches may fall short.

For Planning:

Planning processes often assume agreement about goals, roles, and evidence. Values in Action invites planners to test those assumptions, surface underlying worldviews, and anticipate value conflicts before they become blockages. The workbook’s practical structure makes it ideal for participatory planning, helping teams move from intentions to actions with greater clarity, legitimacy, and resilience.

For Policy Development:

Policy is inherently a normative endeavour concerned with what should be done. Yet policies frequently reflect hidden biases or fail to acknowledge those most affected; especially negatively affected. This workbook enables policy developers to interrogate whose voices are included, what forms of knowledge are valued, and what trade-offs are ethically defensible. It is particularly useful in areas such as health, environment, and social justice, where policy decisions carry deep value-based moral implications.

The workbook is donationware. You are welcome to download it for free. However, to help me cover the costs of preparation and publication, please consider donating the cost of a cup of coffee in my part of the world ($5), or more if you think this workbook will be especially valuable to you. Thanks to people’s generosity, my previous workbooks have covered their production costs, and it would be nice if this happened again.

Bob Williams

http://www.bobwilliams.co.nz

https://bobwilliams.gumroad.com/l/valuesinaction

Three Layers of Systems Thinking – Midgley, Lilley, Rajagoplan (2025)

by Gerald Midgley | Jun 2025 | Format: SightlinesRSD14RSD14 ProgrammeSDA blogTopic: Methods & Methodology

ARC25 SIGHTLINES | Anthology of Reflexive Contributors

This article by Gerald Midgley, Rachel Lilley, and Raghav Rajagoplan presents a three-layered approach to systems thinking that centres on relationality—the interconnectedness of people, systems, and perspectives.

Cyb3rSyn podcast on YouTube – The ‘Where’s Wally’ of Systems Thinking: Roger James – and more

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PdNDTdtlOGs

Scaling with Experimentation: https://youtu.be/McdcNJk0R8c
The ‘Where’s Wally’ of Systems Thinking: https://youtu.be/PdNDTdtlOGs

Subscribe to the Cyb3rSyn Newsletter for future episodes: https://www.cyb3rsyn.com/p/the-cyb3rsyn-kaleidoscope-episode-6