John Beckford Still in Torment: (Re)Designing Freedom – WOSC 2024 keynote (YouTube)

WOSCORG

Save14 views 7 Oct 2024WOSC congress 2024 Keynote John Beckford “Still in Torment: (Re)Designing Freedom” It is now 30 years since ‘World in Torment’ explored ‘chronic societary triage’ (WOSC, Beer 1993) and 50 since ‘Designing Freedom’ considered the role of ‘science in the service of man’. This address will briefly rehearse the key ideas of those works and then consider the current state of the world. Examining the societary, political, economic and planetary challenges we are now facing it will examine thosechallenges from a cybernetic perspective and show how those ideas can support us in resolving ‘The Real Threat to “All We Hold Most Dear

John Beckford Still in Torment: (Re)Designing Freedom – YouTube

Harish’s Notebook – Beyond the Elephant – On Churchman’s Systems Approach (Jose, 2024)

Neuroscience & Philosophy Salon

[The two below – all recent posts h/t Luis Pessoa – and a lot more similar talks including Emergence and Causation)

William Bechtel discusses his new book “Philosophy of Neuroscience” (with Linus Huang), including mechanisms and hierarchy/heterarchy (audio only)

Paul Cisek discusses his phylogenetic approach (audio only)

Neuroscience & Philosophy SalonWilliam Bechtel discusses his new book “Philosophy of Neuroscience” (with Linus Huang), including mechanisms and hierarchy/heterarchy (audio only)Paul Cisek discusses his phylogenetic approach (audio only)

Neuroscience & Philosophy Salon | Laboratory of Cognition & Emotion

The Ontology of Complex Systems: Levels of Organization, Perspectives, and Causal Thickets – Wimsatt (2020)

pdf:

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2020

William C. Wimsatt


Get accessShareCite

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Extract

Willard van Orman Quine once said that he had a preference for a desert ontology. This was in an earlier day when concerns with logical structure and ontological simplicity reigned supreme. Ontological genocide was practiced upon whole classes of upper-level or ‘derivative’ entities in the name of elegance, and we were secure in the belief that one strayed irremediably into the realm of conceptual confusion and possible error the further one got from ontic fundamentalism. In those days, one paid more attention to generic worries about possible errors (motivated by our common training in philosophical skepticism) than to actual errors derived from distancing oneself too far from the nitty-gritty details of actual theory, actual inferences from actual data, the actual conditions under which we posited and detected entities, calibrated and ‘burned in’ instruments, identified and rejected artifacts, debugged programs and procedures, explained the mechanisms behind regularities, judged correlations to be spurious, and in general, to the real complexities and richness of actual scientific practice

The Ontology of Complex Systems: Levels of Organization, Perspectives, and Causal Thickets1 | Canadian Journal of Philosophy Supplementary Volume | Cambridge Core
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/canadian-journal-of-philosophy-supplementary-volume/article/abs/ontology-of-complex-systems-levels-of-organization-perspectives-and-causal-thickets1/A455170C6B4DD4BEED0F59E434710053

Self-Organizing Systems: What, How, and Why? – Gershenson (2024)

Carlos Gershenson

[I think I have been getting his surname wrong for years?!]

Version 1 : Received: 6 August 2024 / Approved: 7 August 2024 / Online: 8 August 2024 (12:22:55 CEST)

How to cite: Gershenson, C. Self-Organizing Systems: What, How, and Why?. Preprints 2024, 2024080549. https://doi.org/10.20944/preprints202408.0549.v1 Gershenson, C. Self-Organizing Systems: What, How, and Why?. Preprints 2024, 2024080549. https://doi.org/10.20944/preprints202408.0549.v1Copy

Abstract

I present a personal account of self-organizing systems. As such, it is necessarily biased and partial. Nevertheless, it should be useful to motivate useful discussions. The relevant contribution is not my attempts at answering questions (maybe all my answers are wrong), but the steps towards framing relevant questions to better understand self-organization, information, complexity, and emergence. With this aim, I start with a notion and examples of self-organizing systems (what?), continue with their properties and related concepts (how?), and close with applications (why?).

link:

Self-Organizing Systems: What, How, and Why?[v1] | Preprints.org
https://www.preprints.org/manuscript/202408.0549/v1

Four Postdoc Fellowships in Modeling & Engineering Risk and Complexity (MERC) – Naples – deadline 15 October 2024

4 Postdoc Fellowships in Modeling & Engineering Risk and Complexity (MERC)

@SSMeridionale, Naples, Italy!

Deadline: 15 Oct 2024

Salary: EUR 35,000/year

Apply: https://shorturl.at/QuCq3

Details: https://shorturl.at/ZDHsi#Postdoc#ResearchFellowship#ComplexSystems

4 Postdoc Fellowships in Modeling & Engineering Risk and Complexity (MERC) @SSMeridionale, Naples, Italy! Deadline: 15 Oct 2024 Salary: EUR 35,000/year Apply: https://shorturl.at/QuCq3 Details: https://shorturl.at/ZDHsi#Postdoc #ResearchFellowship #ComplexSystems

Mario di Bernardo on X: “📢4 Postdoc Fellowships in Modeling & Engineering Risk and Complexity (MERC) @SSMeridionale, Naples, Italy! 📅 Deadline: 15 Oct 2024 💶 Salary: EUR 35,000/year 🔗 Apply: https://t.co/65amYkxWFC 🔗 Details: https://t.co/7GMLMihrLE #Postdoc #ResearchFellowship #ComplexSystems https://t.co/aZEhvtGI46” / X

Toward a neuroscience of natural behavior (2024) – and ‘systems neuroscience’

Systems neuroscience

https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/neuroscience/systems-neuroscience

Toward a neuroscience of natural behavior

Paul Cisek, Andrea M. Green

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.conb.2024.102859Get rights and content

Under a Creative Commons license

open access

Highlights

  • •Understanding natural behavior requires not just new ways of collecting data, but also new theories for interpreting data.
  • •We suggest a stepwise approach for making experiments and theories more naturalistic without losing interpretability.
  • •Theories that address natural behavior can look for inspiration in ethology and evolution.
  • •Ecologically valid theories and experiments that test them should incorporate closed loop interaction with the world.
  • •A key challenge is to balance developing more ecologically valid theories while keeping aspects of existing concepts.

Toward a neuroscience of natural behaviorAuthor links open overlay panelPaul Cisek, Andrea M. GreenShow moreAdd to MendeleyShareCitehttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.conb.2024.102859Get rights and contentUnder a Creative Commons licenseopen accessHighlights•Understanding natural behavior requires not just new ways of collecting data, but also new theories for interpreting data.•We suggest a stepwise approach for making experiments and theories more naturalistic without losing interpretability.•Theories that address natural behavior can look for inspiration in ethology and evolution.•Ecologically valid theories and experiments that test them should incorporate closed loop interaction with the world.•A key challenge is to balance developing more ecologically valid theories while keeping aspects of existing concepts.

Toward a neuroscience of natural behavior – ScienceDirect

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959438824000217

Evolution of behavioural control from chordates to primates – Cisek (2021)

Paul Cisek

Published:27 December 2021https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2020.0522

Abstract

This article outlines a hypothetical sequence of evolutionary innovations, along the lineage that produced humans, which extended behavioural control from simple feedback loops to sophisticated control of diverse species-typical actions. I begin with basic feedback mechanisms of ancient mobile animals and follow the major niche transitions from aquatic to terrestrial life, the retreat into nocturnality in early mammals, the transition to arboreal life and the return to diurnality. Along the way, I propose a sequence of elaboration and diversification of the behavioural repertoire and associated neuroanatomical substrates. This includes midbrain control of approach versus escape actions, telencephalic control of local versus long-range foraging, detection of affordances by the dorsal pallium, diversified control of nocturnal foraging in the mammalian neocortex and expansion of primate frontal, temporal and parietal cortex to support a wide variety of primate-specific behavioural strategies. The result is a proposed functional architecture consisting of parallel control systems, each dedicated to specifying the affordances for guiding particular species-typical actions, which compete against each other through a hierarchy of selection mechanisms.

This article is part of the theme issue ‘Systems neuroscience through the lens of evolutionary theory’.

Evolution of behavioural control from chordates to primatesPaul CisekPublished:27 December 2021https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2020.0522AbstractThis article outlines a hypothetical sequence of evolutionary innovations, along the lineage that produced humans, which extended behavioural control from simple feedback loops to sophisticated control of diverse species-typical actions. I begin with basic feedback mechanisms of ancient mobile animals and follow the major niche transitions from aquatic to terrestrial life, the retreat into nocturnality in early mammals, the transition to arboreal life and the return to diurnality. Along the way, I propose a sequence of elaboration and diversification of the behavioural repertoire and associated neuroanatomical substrates. This includes midbrain control of approach versus escape actions, telencephalic control of local versus long-range foraging, detection of affordances by the dorsal pallium, diversified control of nocturnal foraging in the mammalian neocortex and expansion of primate frontal, temporal and parietal cortex to support a wide variety of primate-specific behavioural strategies. The result is a proposed functional architecture consisting of parallel control systems, each dedicated to specifying the affordances for guiding particular species-typical actions, which compete against each other through a hierarchy of selection mechanisms.This article is part of the theme issue ‘Systems neuroscience through the lens of evolutionary theory’.

Evolution of behavioural control from chordates to primates | Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rstb.2020.0522

Researchers refute the validity of ‘assembly theory of everything’ hypothesis

[Something elegant about this…]

 Editors’ notes

Researchers refute the validity of ‘assembly theory of everything’ hypothesis

by King’s College London

molecular
Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Three new papers refute claims for the assembly theory of molecular complexity being claimed as a new “theory of everything.”

First publicly posited in 2017, assembly theory is a hypothesis concerning the measurability of molecular complexity that claims to characterize life, explain natural selection and evolution, and even to redefine our understanding of time, matter, life and the universe.

However, researchers led by Dr. Hector Zenil from the School of Biomedical Engineering & Imaging Sciences (BMEIS), in collaboration with colleagues from King Abdullah University for Science and Technology (KAUST) and the Karolinska Institute in Sweden, have successfully demonstrated in a paper published in npj Systems Biology, that the same results can be achieved by using traditional statistical algorithms and compression algorithms.

In a second paper just published by PLoS Complex Systems, they have also mathematically proven that assembly theory is an equivalent to Shannon Entropy and therefore not a novel approach to any of those applications and is an implementation of a well-known and popular compression algorithm used behind ZIP compression and image encoding formats such as PNG.

Continues in source:

Researchers refute the validity of ‘assembly theory of everything’ hypothesis

https://phys.org/news/2024-09-refute-validity-theory-hypothesis.html

End-September monthly events mailing from SCiO

All at https://www.systemspractice.org/en/events

And see training opportunities at https://www.systemspractice.org/en/courses

This is the end-September 2024 monthly events mailing from SCiO.  There are plenty of events now planned. Click on the flags or group titles below to go to the events that interest you. Please remember that you can attend online events organised by any of the SCiO groups if they are held in a language you speak/understand (and you are a member if it is a member-only meeting). Further details of events may be available by clicking on the event titles below and you can also book each event directly from the Book now text.

Please note that some groups post events and add details quite late, so it is always worth checking the website – also for changes to dates and times. Please click here to see all the events in a browser.

  SCiO Belgium   SCiO DACH
   SCiO Espana  SCiO Finland
  SCiO Ireland  SCiO Nederland
  SCiO UK

The SCiO AGM was held this last weekend and a video and the minutes of it are available to members – see the bottom of the Home page on the website or click here.

Best Regards

Steve

SCiO – Systems & Complexity in Organisation

Mobile      07712 140422         

e-mail      steve.hales@systemspractice.org                       

website    www.systemspractice.org  

This message is confidential to the intended recipient. It does not constitute a legally binding document on the part of either the sender or the recipient. If this message has been received by you in error please reply to: steve.hales@systemspractice.org  with UNSUBSCRIBE as the title  


Systems and Complexity in Organisation Ltd is a company registered in England with Company Number: 3499590 Registered address: Unit 14 Tower Street, Century Building, Brunswick Business Park, Liverpool  L3 4BJ  UK

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  SCiO UK

CSH and the Climate/ Biodiversity Emergencies – Development Event

Tue, Oct 15th, 2024    18:30 – 20:30  GMT+1

The October event is a ‘special’, concluding our exploration of the applicability of Critical Systems Heuristics to understanding and shaping interventions on the climate and biodiversity emergencies. We will be looking at sources of legitimacy, what are the current structures and participants and:

  • who ought to be representing the interests of those negatively affected?
  • what ought to be the opportunities for those negatively affected to have agency in decisions?
  • what opportunities ought there to be for reconciling different worldviews relating to climate and biodiversity systems?

Members only; FREE; Online event; BOOK NOW

Virtual Open Meeting – November 2024

Mon, Nov 18th, 2024    19:30 – 22:00  GMT

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.

The first session speaker will be Ed Fish, who will talk about “Causation seen through a Sociotechnical Lens”

A second session will be posted as soon as the speaker is confirmed. 

Causation seen through a Sociotechnical Lens – Ed Fish

All welcome; FREE; Online event; English; BOOK NOW

______________________________________________________________

  SCiO Nederland

SCIO-NL monthly meeting October 2024 (live in Vianen and in Dutch)

Fri, Oct 11th, 2024   12:30 – 16:00  CET+1

SCIO-NL komt elke 2e vrijdag van de maand live bijeen in Vianen (Hagenweg 3c). Er staan 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 gasten. Neem contact op via ed@doitogether.nl als je interesse hebt, maar nog geen lid van de club bent.

NL Members + guests; Free; Hagenweg 3c, Vianen, Netherlands;  Dutch  BOOK NOW

SCIO-NL monthly meeting November 2024 (live in Vianen and in Dutch)

Fri, Nov 8th, 2024   13:30 – 17:00  CET

Open SCIO-NL monthly meeting November 2024 (live in Vianen and in Dutch) configuration options

SCIO-NL komt elke 2e vrijdag van de maand live bijeen in Vianen (Hagenweg 3c). Er staan 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 gasten. Neem contact op via ed@doitogether.nl als je interesse hebt, maar nog geen lid van de club bent.

NL Members + guests; Free; Hagenweg 3c, Vianen, Netherlands;  Dutch; BOOK NOW

______________________________________________________________

  SCiO Belgium

Deep Dive Reeks – sessie 1/3

Tue, Oct 8th, 2024  19:00 – 21:00  CET+1

We verbreden in deze Deep Dive reeks onze systemische kaders. Waar we in de vorige Deep Dives ons hebben verdiept in het Viable Systems Model laten we nu drie andere benaderingen aan bod komen: De kritische systeembenadering, de systeem dynamische benadering en de strategische optie formuleringsbenadering.

Members only + Guests; 150 euro (werkingskosten), Locn: tbc, Belgium; Dutch  BOOK NOW

Open speaker session – Jan De Visch & Kashmir Birk – Humanizing the Corporation: A Regenerative Leadership Playbook

Tue, Nov 12th, 2024  19:00 – 21:00  CET

In an era where the traditional corporate paradigm often views employees merely as cogs in the machinery of profit, Humanizing the Corporation: A Regenerative Leadership Playbook offers a revolutionary perspective. This insightful guide presents seven key principles to help organizations transition toward a more humane and sustainable way of operating. Jan De Visch and Kashmir Birk explain the key ideas of their new book….

All welcome; FREE; Online event; Dutch;  BOOK NOW

______________________________________________________________

  SCiO Finland

Systeemiajattelun perusteet: mallit – Professor Matti Vilkko of Tampere University presents on the foundations of Systems Thinking.

Thu, Oct 17th, 2024 – 16:00 – 17:30  EEST

Päätöksentekijä käyttää päätöksenteossa tietoisesti tai tietämättään malleja. Kun mallien käyttö on tietoista, päätöksenteko on sujuvampaa ja päätökset johtavat paremmin haluttuihin tavoitteisiin. Mutta mitä nämä mallit ovat, miten niitä syntyy ja luodaan, ja millaisia malleja pystytään käyttämään päätöksenteossa. Esityksessä käydään läpi mallien käytön perusteita.  Puhuja: Professori Matti Vilkko, Automaatio- ja konetekniikan yksikön päällikkö, Tampereen yliopisto Online event

All welcome; FREE; Online event; Finnish  BOOK NOW

Opening the Box – Communicating Systems Thinking

Thu, Nov 14th, 2024   16:00 – 17:30  EET

“Opening the Box: Systems Thinking for Transformative Conversations” delves into the core principles of systems thinking, offering practical insights to help individuals and organizations navigate complexity. Authored by Jan De Visch, Miguel Pantaleon, Namrata Arora and Tony Korycki, this book promises to be an invaluable resource for anyone interested in understanding and applying systems thinking in their personal and professional lives. This session will feature the book’s authors, sharing their insights and engaging in a transformative conversation, applying the book’s insights.

opening the box: systems thinking for transformative conversations – Jan De Visch – Miguel Pantaleon – Namrata Arora – Tony Korycki

All welcome; FREE; Online event; English/Finnish;  BOOK NOW

______________________________________________________________

   SCiO DACH (Deutschland, Österreich, Schweiz)

Die Natur der Komplexität und Konzepte damit umzugehen – Vortrag von Michael Frahm

Thu, Nov 28th, 2024   19:00 – 20:00  CET

Michael Frahm spricht in diesem Vortrag über Komplexität und über Konzepte damit umzugehen. Dabei unternimmt er einen Streifzug durch verschiedene Wissensgebiete (Naturwissenschaften, Kybernetik, Komplexitäts Theorie, etc…) und geht der Interpretation von Komplexität und den unterschiedlichen Konzepten verschiedener Akteure mit Komplexität umzugehen nach. Von Henri Poincaré (1854-1912) bis Mike C. Jackson und vielen anderen.

Members only + Guests, FREE, Online event. German;  BOOK NOW

 ______________________________________________________________

   SCiO Ireland

Living together with uncertainty

Wed, Oct 9th, 2024   19:30  GMT+1

Join us for a conversation on living together with uncertainty. It can be deeply unsettling when the ground beneath us keeps shifting. Perhaps it can be comforting to reach for certainty and knowing. However, could there be possibilities present in embracing and “listening” to uncertainty while recognising our interconnectedness? The session is an invitation for reflective practice where we play with stepping out of our knowing and embrace the “ecology of ideas” we can open for each other. There will be a short presentation followed by a space for reflective practice together. …

Ireland Members only + Guests, FREE, Online event; English;  BOOK NOW

______________________________________________________________

  SCiO Espana

No meetings currently planned October/November. Please check Events on the website. Contact SCiO Espana through https://www.systemspractice.org/en/community/scio-esp.

Critical Systems Thinking with Michael C. Jackson – BCG Henderson Institute podcast hosted by Martin Reeves

On LinkedIn, Mike Jackson says

I’m hoping this podcast, for the BCG Henderson Institute, helps to introduce Critical Systems Thinking to a wider audience of leaders, managers and decision-makers. Martin Reeves asks all the right questions.

Critical Systems Thinking with Michael C. Jackson

“I don’t think systems thinking can ever replace the experience or knowledge of context that a leader or a decision-maker has, but I do think it can help their thinking.”

Critical Systems Thinking with Michael C. Jackson – BCG Henderson Institute
https://bcghendersoninstitute.com/critical-systems-thinking-with-michael-c-jackson/

The IFSR Quarterly 3_2024 – a window into and mirror of the cybersystemic community. Brought to you by the IFSR.org

International Federation for Systems Research (IFSR)

2,385 followers

September 17, 2024

The IFSR Quarterly 3_2024 – a window into and mirror of the cybersystemic community. Brought to you by the IFSR.orgInternational Federation for Systems Research (IFSR)2,385 followersSeptember 17, 2024

(2) The IFSR Quarterly 3_2024 – a window into and mirror of the cybersystemic community. Brought to you by the IFSR.org | LinkedIn

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/ifsr-quarterly-32024-window-mirror-qxtaf/?trackingId=X8una1hESZWExTm%2Ft0Z8kg%3D%3D

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

Metaphorum webinars – past and future

Past:

September 4, 2024 – Mark Johnson on Topologies of Prediction: Management, Cybernetics, and Artificial Intelligence

Exploring Haier’s RenDanHeYi and the Viable System Model.

The heart of the 4th industrial revolution in the brain of VSM. Rodrigo Fernández Albornoz

I never promote Metaphorum webinars because they are ‘member-only’ but as they put the videos online – and the details and link etc are not private – I assume it is ok 🙂

Upcoming Webinars – Metaphorum

Coming up:

02.10.2024

VSM & Ethics

Stephen Harwood

Technology is Janus-faced with it having both a good and a dark side, this highlighting the ethics domain. This has implications for the implementation of technology in general. Extending the notion of technology implementation as one form of managed change, these implications extend to how we handle change, especially change in complex situations.

06.11.2024

The Great Transformation

Prof Fredmund Malik

The economy and society are going through one of the greatest transformations in history. It is a paradigmatic mega-change which brings about most risky turbulences. It is no less than a shift from an old to a new world. To master it, a revolutionary new management is needed in order to shift resources in the critical decision zone. For this challenge we have the best solutions ever, amplifying the effectiveness of management by 80fold and speed of change by 100fold.

04.12.2024

Diagnosing Complex Organisations with Diverse Cultures — Configuring Mindset Agency Theory, with an application to ASEAN

Dr Tuomo Rautakivi and Prof. Dr. Maurice Yolles

Complex organisations require coherence to achieve adaptive goals through agency. This presentation introduces Mindset Agency Theory (MAT), a metatheoretical framework designed for modelling and diagnosing agency within culturally diverse populations. MAT, a cybernetic multi-ontology framework, delineates five formative traits defining agency character.

Ricard Solé youtube conversation with Dr Michael Levin – the bounds of complexity in living systems (2024)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTzBW_9fl0s

In a tweet, Ricard Solé (@ricard_sole) says:

What are the bounds What are the bounds of complexity in living systems? How can synthetic biology and bioengineering be used to interrogate emergent properties or information processing in cells & organisms? Check my conversation with Michael Levin @drmichaellevincomplexity in living systems? How can synthetic biology and bioengineering be used to interrogate emergent properties or information processing in cells & organisms? Check my conversation with Michael Levin

Ricard Solé on X: “What are the bounds of complexity in living systems? How can synthetic biology and bioengineering be used to interrogate emergent properties or information processing in cells & organisms? Check my conversation with Michael Levin @drmichaellevin https://t.co/bF32rWefSo” / X

Levin himself has two websites, with a lot of other interesting conversation guests

https://drmichaellevin.org/resources/guests.html

As part of the Levin lab at Tufts https://www.drmichaellevin.org/: Embodied Minds: understanding diverse intelligence in evolved, designed, and hybrid complex systems
And the ‘less formal’