Luhmann Semioticized
Luhmann Semioticized
Luhmann Semioticized
SOCIOCYBERNETICS
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Volume 3 Number 2 Fall/Winter 2002/2003
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The JOURNAL OF SOCIOCYBERNETICS (ISSN 1607-8667) is an electronic journal
published biannually--Spring/Summer and Fall/Winter--by the Research Committee on
Sociocybernetics of the International Sociological Association.
MANUSCRIPT submissions should be sent electronically (in MSWord or Rich Text File format)
to the Editor: Richard E. Lee, rlee@binghamton.edu; Newsletter copy should be sent to the
Newsletter Editor: Cor van Dijkum, c.vandijkum@fss.uu.nl. In general, please follow the
Chicago Manuel of Style; citations and bibliography should follow the current journal style
(APA). Normally, articles should be original texts of no more than 6000 words, although
longer articles will be considered in exceptional circumstances. The Journal looks for
submissions that are innovative and apply principles of General Systems Theory and
Cybernetics to the social sciences, broadly conceived.
COPYRIGHT remains the property of authors. Permission to reprint must be obtained from the
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SOCIOCYBERNETICS traces its intellectual roots to the rise of a panoply of new approaches to
scientific inquiry beginning in the 1940's. These included General System Theory, cybernetics
and information theory, game theory and automata, net, set, graph and compartment theories,
and decision and queuing theory conceived as strategies in one way or another appropriate to
the study of organized complexity. Although today the Research Committee casts a wide net in
terms of appropriate subject matters, pertinent theoretical frameworks and applicable
methodologies, the range of approaches deployed by scholars associated with RC51 reflect the
maturation of these developments. Here we find, again, GST and first- and second-order
cybernetics; in addition, there is widespread sensitivity to the issues raised by "complexity
studies," especially in work conceptualizing systems as self-organizing, autocatalytic or
autopoietic. "System theory", in the form given it by Niklas Luhmann, and world-systems
analysis are also prominently represented within the ranks of RC51.
The institutionalization of sociocybernetic approaches in what was to become RC51, the
Research Committee on Sociocybernetics of the International Sociological Association, began
in 1980 with the founding of an ISA Ad Hoc Group and proceeded with the organization of
sessions at succeeding quadrennial World Congresses of Sociology. The eventual RC51
became a Thematic Group and then a Working Group. Finally, in recognition of its
extraordinary success (growing from some 30 members in early 1995 to 240 in 1998), the
group was promoted to the status of Research Committee at the 1998 World Congress of
Sociology in Montreal.
Over these past two decades, sociocybernetics has attracted a broad range of scholars whose
departmental affiliations represent the entire spectrum of the disciplines, from the humanities
and the social sciences through the sciences, mathematics and engineering. Furthermore, the
many countries of origin of these RC51 members attest to the wide international appeal of
sociocybernetic approaches. Within this highly diverse community, there is wide agreement on
some very general issues, for instance, on developing strategies for the study of human reality
that avoid reification, are cognizant of the pitfalls of reductionism and dualism, and generally
eschew linear or homeostatic models. Not surprisingly, however, there are also wide
divergences in subject matter, theoretical frameworks and methodological practices.
Many have argued that models developed for the study of complexity can be usefully
appropriated for the study of human reality. Moreover, however, the emphasis in complexity
studies on contingency, context-dependency, multiple, overlapping temporal and spatial
frameworks, and deterministic but unpredictable systems displaying an arrow-of-time suggest
that the dividing line between the sciences and the historical social sciences is fuzzier than
many might like to think. What is more, in the humanities, the uniquely modern concepts of
original object and autonomous human creator have come under serious attack. The
coincidence of these two phenomena substantiate the impression that across the disciplines
there may be observed a new concern for spatial-temporal wholes constituted at once of
relational structures and the phenomenological time of their reproduction and change.
In this context of rich history and exciting possibilities, the Research Committee on
Sociocybernetics of the International Sociological Association extends an open invitation
through the Journal of Sociocybernetics to all engaged in the common quest to explain and
understand social reality holistically and self-reflexively without forsaking a concern for
human values--human values not construed simply as a matter of individual ethics, but
conceived as an integral part of a social science for our time.
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JOURNAL OF
SOCIOCYBERNETICS
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Volume 3 Number 2 Fall/Winter 2002/2003
Contents
Articles
Reviews
Newsletter 14 29
1. Letter from the President 29
2. Message from the Secretary 30
3. New Developments in RC51 30
4. Communications about Sociocybernetics 37
5. Obituaries for Heinz von Foerster 40
6. Upcoming Conferences 44
v
MULTIPLE CONSTRUCTIONS OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL CRISIS:
A SOCIOCYBERNETIC VIEW
David J. Connell
Simplicity, linearity, and predictability were once the norm in scientific studies of the
environment in the West. Recent developments in complex systems thinking have challenged
this approach. Theories of emergence, self-organisation, and autopoiesis, to name a few, take
paradox, unpredictability, non-linearity, and complexity as a basis for scientific study. These
theoretical developments have contributed to multiple constructions of the environmental
crisis. Reconciling these multiple constructions within normal science is difficult, if not
impossible. The difficulty can be viewed as a problem of reference. That is, given
complexity, what is the foundation of our knowledge of multiple constructions of the
environmental crisis? This paper explores implications of multiple constructions of the
environmental crisis within the debate about sustainable development.
Normal science is a cautious, analytic approach pre-occupied with understanding social
order that leaves little if any room for complex social issues (Kuhn 1970). As described by
Kuhn, normal science is a puzzle-solving approach in which it is assumed that the puzzle is
soluble. Unsolved problems are seen as anomalies. Subsequently, areas of study and theory
grow steadily and cautiously, cultivated within a paradigm of theoretical concepts, including
methods and models, approved by scientists in the pertinent field.
Most critically, normal science approaches constrain our ability to deal with multiple
constructions of environmental crises because they provide only one point of reference: the
subject. Segal (2001: 133) highlights the problem. Segal argues that the subject-object position
is only ontological--it will not address itself to how things come about. Reality is taken as
objects observed by a subject. So long as the ontology of social theory rests upon subject-
object as its point of reference, social theories are limited to describing multiple constructions
of the environmental crisis as objects without accounting for the possibility of multiple
constructions. Consequently, normal science approaches lack a common basis for negotiating
differences.
An alternative to normal science approaches is required to reconcile multiple
constructions of the environmental crisis. The challenge is not to re-shuffle post-modern
Direct correspondence to David J. Connell, Rural Studies, University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada; e-mail:
dave@djconnell.ca.
LUHMANNS SOCIOCYBERNETICS
Luhmann learned from Husserl that the analysis of society cannot begin with a concept
of the subject that does not account for self-reference. After Husserl, the problem of
reference must be posed as the problem of the operative processing of the difference between
self-reference and reference to others (Luhmann 1995: xli), not that of the knowing subject.
Luhmanns general theory of social systems does not attempt to resolve the paradox and
tautology of self-reference (e.g., sustainability is what is sustainable or sustainability is not
unsustainable). Rather, self-reference is a basal condition for both constructing and observing
the environment. Self-referential systems replace the subject as the point of reference for the
construction of knowledge: there is no subject because there is no external observer.
A concept of observing systems can be understood in relation to other concepts of
systems. Until recently systems have been considered either closed or open. Closed systems are
consistent with mechanical systems: internally defined without any reference to their
environment. Environment is used here not as the natural environment, but as the systems
environment. In open systems the relationship between system and environment is a key
MULTIPLE CONSTRUCTIONS OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL CRISIS 3
feature, informing such concepts as input and output, adaptation, and equilibrium. Complexity
theory, including such concepts as self-organization and emergent properties, are part of open
systems thinking. Maturana and Varelas (1980; 1987) development of autopoiesis offered a
new paradigm of systems thinking. An autopoietic system still receives input from the
environment but has the ability to operate internally in such a way as to continuously re-create
the whole, and of the whole to influence the interactions of the parts to that end. The internally
organized operations of the system constitute an observing system.
Luhmann uses autopoiesis, cybernetics, and phenomenology to construct a general
theory of society comprised of observing systems of communication. Society constitutes all
social systems. All social systems are observing systems. The primary distinction that guides
observation is system-environment. It is the systems ability to observe itself as distinct from
its environment that makes it self-referential. The system-environment distinction is
autopoietically reproduced so long as it remains meaningful. Using an autopoietic, self-
referential systems approach means that understanding multiple constructions is constrained
neither by a subject-object duality nor by a focus upon order. To reconcile multiple
constructions of the environmental crisis one must determine what self-referential distinction
guides the observation of the observing system that constructs the crisis.
Niklas Luhmanns theory is premised upon complexity. Because it is not possible at
any moment to connect every element with every other element complexity forces selections
either for or by the system because all the possibilities that the world offers cannot be
actualized, certainly not simultaneously and not even in time (Bednarz 1988). Over time,
relations among elements are embedded in the accumulation of shared meanings. From this,
Luhmann builds upon a logic of operations based on communication, which is the basis for
understanding social systems. Each social system is an organizationally closed observing
system.
Social systems function to process meaning through selection. When we communicate
we are always making a selection among other possibilities; communication is always a
reduction of complexity. Likewise, meaning is always contingent. The organization and
structure of social systems both guide and constrain human abilities to make sense of our
experiential world, our constructions of reality. Communicative selection produces emergent
order; it transforms an improbable order into a probable (functional) one (Luhmann 1995).
Multiple observing social systems have emerged through a process of societal
differentiation (Luhmann 1995). As social interactions increase, new social systems emerge to
increase the societal capacity to process information. Modern Western society is dominated by
functional systems (e.g., law, economy, education, religion, science). Function systems are
organized around strict binary codes that both guide and constrain how we construct reality.
The economic system, for example, is an organizationally closed (autopoietic) system. It
constructs the environmental crisis only in terms of to pay/not to pay, for instance, who should
pay to clean up the damage. Similarly, the law system only constructs the environmental crisis
in legal terms, legal/illegal, or who is legally responsible to pay for the clean-up. Functional
systems process the meaning of society in their own terms via coding, and no system binds
another. The existence and persistence of organizationally closed binary codes is why and how
multiple constructions of the environmental crisis are possible within a process of societal
4 David J. Connell
The scope of issues within the sustainable development debate is exceedingly broad,
including health, wealth, poverty, power, water, air, energy, agriculture, youth, seniors,
indigenous people, women, workers, and economy. The integrity of ecosystems is only one of
many issues within the debate, but it is an issue that helps define the concept of sustainable
development. The United Nations Draft Plan of Implementation for sustainable development
states, Human activities are having an increasing impact on the integrity of ecosystems that
provide essential resources and services for human well-being and economic activities.
Managing the natural resources base in a sustainable and integrated manner is essential for
sustainable development (UN 2002c: 14 emphasis added). The sustainable development
debate is predicated on a construction of environmental crisis.
How a self-referential social system constructs the environment is implied in how the
system constructs the crisis. For example, the way we construct the environmental crisis is
contingent upon how we observe the environment. A look at the evolving conception of
ecological integrity illustrates the interconnection. There have been distinct shifts in the way
ecological integrity has been conceived (Manuel-Navarrete et al 2001). Manuel-Navarrete et al
(2001) define three models of ecological integrity to illustrate the nature of shifting
conceptions. Each is predicated on a different construction of the environment. In the first
model, the Wildlife-Normative model, there is a clear division between science, society, and
the environment. It was believed that scientists could prescribe an appropriate balance between
human areas and pristine areas (i.e., untouched by humans) based on quantitative
measurements. This first model deployed a deterministic approach to management of the
environment in which crisis is understood as a decline in the percentage of pristine systems. As
determinism waned a second model emerged: the Systemic-Normative model. The notion of
pristine areas was replaced by one of complex ecosystems. The divisions among society,
experts, and the environment were moderated by ethics. Adaptive management was focused on
states of ecosystem integrity. Crisis was seen as a failure of management to minimize the threat
of human systems to natural systems. In the third model, the Systemic-Humanistic model, a
significant shift away from expert management of ecosystems takes place. Adaptive
strategies are now predicated on preferred states of ecosystem health. Adaptive management is
achieved not by rational science but through the negotiation of goals and objectives in a
broader social context. The expert has been replaced by the narrator/facilitator. The
environmental crisis centers upon conflict over preferred states, that is multiple constructions
of preferred states, and of crises.
The shift of models away from a normal science concept of a pristine environment has
been facilitated by a greater reliance on social processes (e.g., participation, facilitation,
consensus). There has been a corresponding shift from deterministic control to adaptive
6 David J. Connell
together tens of thousands of people to reverse the continuing degradation of the global
environment (UN 2002b) would be redundant. Our common society would know what to do.
Rather, it is the possibility of multiple constructions of the environmental crisis that brings so
many people to a world summit on sustainable development.
The sustainable development debate reflects a number of societal processes. On the one
hand, our awareness of an environmental crisis has been elevated as new concerns like global
warming and ozone depletion are increasingly supported by scientific research.
Correspondingly, as discussed above, constructions of the environmental crisis have evolved.
Introducing uncertainty sensitized scientists to the influence and role of human values within
the scientific process and has sensitized people to the limits of science. In effect, the summit on
sustainable development aimed to reconcile multiple constructions of the environmental crisis.
A sociocybernetic approach, which is based on the presumption of complexity, lends
insight into how reconciliation might be possible. All communications begin by drawing a
distinction (Luhmann 1995). Thus, an analysis of the sustainable development debate can be
directed by differences, not only by identities. Questions need not be asked only about who is
at the table, but also about what distinctions are being made? Observe the observers. What
distinctions are the observers making when defining problems and issues of sustainable
development? In other words, to reconcile multiple constructions of the environmental crisis
one must determine what distinctions guide the observations of environmental crisis.
An exercise in identifying all of the distinctions and cross-referencing the distinctions
with all the participants of the UN Summit (and participants can use more than one distinction)
is a cumbersome, if not impossible task. Inevitably, the self-referential nature of the
construction of the environmental crisis leads to paradox and tautology, thus blocking further
analysis. An easier task is to start at the top with the opening statement of the UN Summits
Draft Political Declaration. We, Heads of State and Government, assembled at the World
Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, South Africa from 2-4 September 2002,
declare our commitment to build a humane and caring global society in pursuit of the goal of
human dignity for all" (UN 2002d). A brief analysis of the UNs statement illustrates how
distinctions guide the sustainable development debate.
The stated goal of the UN is to build a humane and caring global society. It is very
difficult to disagree with this statement. But what does it mean? What is global society?
Does society mean every living person? Is it only people, or does it include the natural
environment? What is the relation between society and the natural environment? If society
includes all people, what is human dignity? Is human dignity premised upon equality or are
some forms of inequality presumed? Urry (2000) argued that historically and conceptually
society meant a form of order through a nation-state, with clear territorial boundaries and a
system of government. Mann (1993: 11, cited in Urry 2000) defined global society not as a
unity but as a single power network. Given these possible interpretations of society, among
others, it is not clear to what building a humane and caring global society refers.
Situating the sustainable development debate within Luhmanns theory of societal
differentiation provides a platform to consider what it might mean (or not mean) to build a
global society. According to Luhmann (1982; 1995), Western society is dominated by
functional systems (e.g., law, economy, education, religion, community, family, science). Each
8 David J. Connell
functional system processes the meaning of society in its own terms, and no system binds
another. The lack of a single binding understanding of the world is why and how multiple
constructions of the environmental crisis are possible within the sustainable development
debate.
Similarly, how a crisis is defined prejudices how a crisis can be addressed. For instance,
if we choose to use power as a basis for distinguishing the problem of sustainable development
we are restricted to finding solutions predicated on re-distributing power. Likewise, if we see
sustainable development as an issue of wealth-poverty, then we are restricted to finding
solutions predicated on re-distributing wealth. Within this sociocybernetic framework we can
understand how each selection we make, each distinction, pre-determines the solutions
available to us.
What distinctions guide the sustainable development debate at the World Summit?
Sustainable development as set out in the opening statement of the Draft Political Declaration
is distinguished as a societal goal or, the converse, sustainable development is a societal
problem. The distinction is between society and environment. Defining the problem as societal
raises a fundamental question: Who speaks for society? Does the United Nations speak for
society? In the Draft Political Declaration, it appears that heads of state and government speak
for society: As representatives of the worlds peoples we assume a joint responsibility (UN
2002d).
Can heads of state and government speak for all of society? In a functionally
differentiated society the response is no, they cannot speak for society; they are political
representatives and can only speak for the political system, not for other systems, such as the
economy or law systems. In a functionally differentiated society there is not one body (i.e.,
system or sub-system) that represents society; there are only multiple observers of society and
societys problem. The Draft Political Declaration could be stated more accurately: As
political representatives of the worlds peoples we assume a joint responsibility for political
solutions.
The autonomy of functional systems is evident in the on-going debate about sustainable
development. The UNs Draft Plan of Implementation states: we commit ourselves to
undertaking concrete actions and measures at all levels and to enhancing international
cooperation, taking into account the Rio Principles, including, inter alia, the principle of
common but differentiated responsibilities (UN 2002c: 1; emphasis added). A few points
down in the plan, common but differentiated is implemented as each country has the primary
responsibility for its own sustainable development (UN 2002c: 3). Common but differentiated
is also characterised as a difference between the rich and poor (UN 2002d).
In the UNs explication of common but different, we can see the implications of living
in a functional society. The principle of common but differentiated responsibilities made
explicit in the UN documents can be interpreted as common at the societal level and
differentiated by functional systems, for instance, economics, politics, law, and further
differentiated by sub-systems (nation-states). Specifically, we can interpret "common" to be
differentiated by politics. Hence, responsibility is assigned to countries.
We can see the exercise of political autonomy in the opposition of the United States to
the Kyoto Protocol on climate change. In President Bushs remarks on global climate change,
MULTIPLE CONSTRUCTIONS OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL CRISIS 9
he referred to the earths well-being as an issue important to America and to every nation in
every part of our world. Further, We recognise our responsibility and will meet it at home,
in our hemisphere, and in the world" (2001). The United States opposition is well within the
bounds of common but differentiated and the United States is very clearly speaking for itself,
in compelling contrast to the UNs position as representing a global society.
Quite simply, the UN claim to represent society is not binding in a common but
functionally differentiated society. In the absence of a single binding representation of society,
not only the constructions of the environmental crisis but also the responsibilities for
addressing the crisis become fragmented along functional lines. We may have a common crisis,
but we also have different ways of interpreting the problem and different ways of assuming
responsibility for the problem.
Multiple constructions of the environmental crisis can be examined not only by who is
defining the crisis, but also by how the crisis is defined. The emphasis shifts from identifying
participants to understanding what distinctions participants (observing systems) make. At the
World Summit, the Draft Political Declaration states that the heads of state and government
are the representatives of the worlds peoples and assume joint responsibility for sustainable
development (UN 2002d: 1). As observers, we may ask: who (or what observing system) made
this distinction?
CONCLUSION
they cannot see what their coded identity cannot see. Systems do interact with other systems.
The interaction is not a process of reconciliation but of disturbance, or resonance (structural
coupling) as Luhmann (1989) calls it. In the sociocybernetic sense, constructions become
compatible, but observing systems cannot change the way they observe.
Not all sociologists will agree with a sociocybernetic approach based on Luhmanns
framework. The organizational closure of systems can be seen to create unnecessary
boundaries that reinforce points of conflict. Further, one can argue that irreconcilable
differences are merely tautological outcomes of these unnecessary boundaries. Also, the
abstract concepts of social systems of communication can seem too far removed from action
and the everyday practicalities of dealing with discrepancies of power and the threat of
poverty. On the other hand, the same focus on communication can be seen as more pragmatic
because the discussion avoids ideological debates by focussing upon the effects of
communication as the process of coordinating how people and groups negotiate similarities
and differences.
The aim of this paper has been to attempt unity at a different level of abstraction than
available via deconstruction. Within the debate about sustainable development, Luhmanns
approach frames the question: who (that is, which system) has a solution that privileges
society? We can see that ideological positions (e.g., capitalist versus socialist) and positions of
interest (e.g., health, poverty, food) are not a sufficient basis for either difference or
reconciliation. These are positions of identity, not positions of difference. Identities have to be
constructed, but by whom? By what distinctions?
A sociocybernetic theory of self-referential social systems accounts for multiple
constructions of the environmental crisis because there are multiple ways to observe the
environmental crisis. Self-referential observing systems provide an alternative to a subject-
centred approach. More pragmatically, a theory of multiple observing systems provides a
framework that makes understanding and negotiating differences possible. The operative
mandate is: observe the observing social system.
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12 David J. Connell
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LUHMANN SEMIOTICIZED
Sren Brier
The combination of systems theory and cybernetics was necessary to make a theory
pertaining to organization, function, and control of mechanical, living, and human systems.
This combination was instrumental in producing the theory of information from which
information science grew. Through modern second order cybernetics, autopoiesis theory, and
chaos and complexity research we have developed a view of the body and the mind as self-
organizing and self-producing systems. These scientific and materialistic approaches seem to
have accepted a statistical information concept as a tool in describing the organizing ability of
nature, including the role of DNA. But even the cognitive science information-processing
paradigm used in cybernetic and systems approaches does not have a theory of signification
and meaning that encompasses the phenomenological view. A theory of signification is
necessary to understand how signs are created and become meaningful. Only the semiotics of
Charles Sanders Peirce (1931-1958) includes non-intentional signs, and as such, signs of the
body and nature.
Human life is lived in meaning. As Niklas Luhmann (1995) states, we use meaning to
reduce complexity. One aspect of stress is being overwhelmed by complexity. Luhmann (1990)
argues that we are composed of three major closed, autopoietic systems: a biological system, a
Direct correspondence to Sren Brier, Associate Professor, Philosophy of Science, Section for Learning and
Interdisciplinary Methods, Department of Economics and Natural Resources, KVL (Royal Danish Agricultural
University), Copenhagen, Denmark; e-mail: sbr@kvl.dk..
1
Epistemological and ontological analysis, developed as a foundation for the model, can be found in Brier
(2000b, c, 2001a, 2002a and 2002c). An application of cybersemiotics in library science and information seeking
can be found in Thellefsen, Brier, and Thellefsen (2003). Further documentation and argumentation can be found
in the selection of papers included in the appendix.
psychological system (that does not speak, a life world), and a socio-communicative
interpersonal system. A symbolic iconic model is shown in Figure 1.
Unfortunately, theories of meaning are scarce in the sciences and technology and
usually left to continental philosophy. Contrary to this division, Peirce's semiotics is a doctrine
of signification, thinking, and communication with the capacity of encompassing modern
scientific information theory. Peircean semiotics is unique in its ability to engage aspects of the
sciences, humanities, and social sciences. In biosemiotics, developed by Thomas Sebeok
(1976, 1989) on this basis, it becomes a theory of meaning for all living systems.
Signification processes combined with the environment are seen as creating a
signification sphere of meaningful objects in the cognitive apparatus of livings systems (see
Figure 1). This is what Jacob von Uexkll, before the birth of biosemiotics, called the animal's
Umwelt, and Maturana and Varela (1980) call its cognitive domain (which is built through
the eigen functions of the cognitive apparatus, as Von Forster would say). Simultaneously,
on all levels, there are internal and external communication and signification processes taking
place.
When biosemiosis is combined with Luhmanns systems theory, it creates what I call
"cybersemiotics" and becomes a theory of biological, psychological, and sociological-cultural
meaning. It indicates that signification and communication processes work on all three levels
in closed systems. These systems are like blind boxes to one another, and can only function
through interpenetration. Thus, language offers classifications of emotions, but cannot control
the reality and correctness of the classification, as in "am I really in love, or is it just a stomach
ache?" Emotions offer a classification of awareness of biological situations, both externally
and internally, which they cannot control as such; for instance, "I feel uncomfortable, is this
situation dangerous? Do I want to fight or to run?" About internal biosemiosis Sebeok wrote:
Semiosis is the fulcrum around which another emerging interfacial discipline
recently dubbed semio-immunology or immunosemiotics turns. The central
problem immunologists keep struggling with is how the healthy immune system
manages to recognize and respond to an almost infinite number of alien organisms
and yet fails to assail components of self. What has become reasonably clear is
that a single line of defence against potential pathogens is not enough and that
there are dissimilitudes between antigen recognition by T cells and that by B cells.
Jerne has proposed a model of particular interest to semioticians, including
especially linguists, with his claim that the immense repertoire of the vertebrate
immune system functions as an open-ended generative grammar, "a vocabulary
comprised not of words but of sentences that is capable of responding to any
sentence expressed by the multitude of antigens which the immune system may
encounter." The human immune system consists of about 1012 cells, dissipated
over the entire body, excepting only the brain, but the former and the nervous
system are known to exercise pervasive mutual sway one over the other by means
of two-way electrochemical messages (Sebeok 1999: 390).
Thus inside the body there are endosemiotic processes (Uexkull et al 1983) a work
among the nervous, the immune, and the hormone systems. Sebeok writes about the
endosemiotic processes: The endocrine and the nervous systems, as noted above, are
intimately fastened together via signs. As for the neural code itself, semiosis is what
neurobiology is all about (1999: 391).
But there is also the level of the inner life of the pre-linguistic mind or psyche. In the
inner life world of Merleau-Ponty, wordless (pre-linguistic) phenosemiotic processes of
emotions, will, and images play themselves out. I agree with the phenomenologists that there is
an inner pre-linguistic world that is neither rational nor irrational, neither objective nor
subjective. It is the innen welt of Uexkull that interactively produces the Umwelt. In a
modern semiotic understanding this whole area is, although pre-linguistic, still semiotic! It is
even biosemiotic, as it is the product of mostly un- or pre-conscious processes in perception
stemming from bodily processes and from social interactions (the "habitus" of Bodieau).
Between the endosemiotic levels of the bodys own biosemiosis and the phenosemiosis
of the mind there is a connecting system of what I call intrasemiotics (see Figure 2).
We assume that the sign vehicles are somehow chemical, but we still know very little
about how the mind-body interaction functions. In a Peircian philosophy it is all in a semiotic
framework, not denying a physico-chemical level, and an information level of signals
16 Sren Brier
(protosemiotic differences, not triadic and not with meaning). The triadic organization of the
autopoietic and duel-coded (digital in the gene, analogous in the body) self-organization of the
living, brings forth the semiotic qualities of meaning that express the immanent possibility of
Firstness existing inside matter. In Peirces triadic philosophy, Firstness is "unmanifest qualia",
pure feeling, logic, and basic forms in mathematics that only manifest through their connection
with Secondness (force, will power, differences and resistance) and become stabilized through
Thirdness, which refers to regularity, habits of nature (laws), and understanding. The dualistic
absolute difference between mind and body (seen as matter) is avoided. The worldview is
pragmatic and evolutionary through the triadic process that leads to new emergent levels.
COMMUNICATIONAL LEVELS
Figure 3: The three different levels of communication systems described in cybersemiotics. At the
basis is the informational exchange of signals of orientation and other reflexes. On the next level
are the biosemiotic sign games of all living systems, mostly within the species, also valid for the
basic biological drives in humans. Then there is the level of language interchange as dialogue
between self-conscious persons, "language games" as Wittgenstein (1958) calls them.
I have argued that it seems more fruitful to accept and work with five different levels of
interaction in nature, but not necessarily assume any evolutionary causal links between them.
This means that I do not assume that one level gives rise to the other or that causality goes
from matter to mind only. These five levels are:
1. A non-manifest level with hypercomplex or chaotic interactions. The concept of
vacuum in Quantum field theory is one attempt from science to describe this state but
without Peirces synechistic frame. Peirce calls it Firstness and it contains qualia and
pure feeling.
2. An energy level with energy based causal interaction by natural forces.
3. An informational level with signal and/or code causality that creates self-organization.
4. A semiotic level with sign game causality within and between living systems based on
biological and psychological meaning.
LUHMANN SEMIOTICIZED 19
Meaning is seen as coming from semiotic processes in the body and the psyche, their
coupling to the environment, and between two individuals in the sharing of signification
spheres that actualize mutual understanding. Peirces semiotics is special in relation to
Saussures as it allows semiosis with non-intentional aspects of nature and culture. Thus, on all
levels there are both an eco-semiotic and exosemiotic component placing humans in both
nature and culture at the same time.
Figure 4 illustrates the cybersemiotic model built up so far. On the left side we observe
the cybernetic-autopoietic-functionalistic processes. Left of middle we see the communicative
aspects or the Exosemiotics between two organisms and right of middle the internal semiotics
of the organism. Finally, to the far right we look at the organisms perceptual connections to
the environment, ecosemiotics, contributing to its signification sphere.
The functional and the semantic aspects, then, are coupled for the first time here in a
theory that connects biology, psychology and sociology with a theory of signaling,
signification, cognition and communication.
The cybersemiotic approach works by making synergies between the socio-
communication systems theory of Luhmann with its basis in Spencer-Browns logic of
distinction, its inclusion of Maturana and Varelas theory of autopoiesis and Heinz von
Foersters theory of second order cybernetics on one hand, and on the other hand, Peircean
pragmatic semiotics, in the form of the new biosemiotics of Thomas Sebeok (including all
living systems and the human body in the semiotic sphere), combined with Lakoff (1987) and
Lakoff and Johnsons (1999) embodied cognitive semantics and Wittgensteins language-game
theory.
20 Sren Brier
APPENDIX
WORKS CITED
Lakoff, G. 1987. Women, Fire and Dangerous Things: What Categories Reveal about the
Mind. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
Lakoff, G. and M. Johnson. (1999). Philosophy in the Flesh: The Embodied Mind and its
Challenge to Western Thought. New York: Basic Books.
Luhmann, N. 1990. Essays on Self-Reference. New York: Colombia University Press.
Luhmann, N. 1995. Social Systems. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
Maturana, H. and F. Varela. 1980. Autopoiesis and Cognition: The Realization of the Living.
Reidel, London.
Peirce, C.S. 1931-58. Collected Papers. Vol. I-VIII. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press.
Sebeok, T. 1976. Contributions to the Doctrine of Signs. Bloomington: Indiana University
Press.
22 Sren Brier
Sebeok, T. 1989. The Sign and Its Masters. New York: University Press of America
Sebeok T.A. 1999. "The Sign Science and the Life Science." Applied Semiotics 6, 7, 386-93.
Uexkll, J. von. 1934. "A Stroll Through the Worlds of Animals and Men. A Picture Book of
Invisible Worlds." In Instinctive Behavior: The Development of a Modern Concept.
Edited by Claire H. Schiller. New York, International Universities Press, 1957, 5-80.
Uexkll, Thure von, Werner Geigges, and Jrg M. Herrmann. 1993. "Endosemiosis."
Semiotica 96, 1/2, 5-51.
Wittgenstein; L. 1958. Philosophical Investigation. Third edition. Translated by G.E.M.
Anscomb. New York: MacMillian.
REVIEW
Understanding Systems, a delightful, precious little book, was published in the summer
of 2002, only a few months before Heinz von Foerster, born in 1911 in Vienna, died on
October 2, 2002 at the age of 90 in his home in Pescadero, California. Originally a physicist, he
immigrated to the United States in 1949 where he had the chance to join the circle of scientists
who came together in the so-called Macy Conferences, developing what came to be
cybernetics. In 1957 he founded the Biological Computer Laboratory (BCL) at the University
of Illinois. He directed the BCL, which provided an inspiring environment for numerous
visitors and creative discussions, until his retirement in 1976. Heinz von Foerster was one of
the founders of cybernetics and in particular the father of so-called Second Order Cybernetics,
which can be defined as "cybernetics of cybernetics" or a kind of cybernetics that takes into
account the scientist himself as an observer of his field of investigation along with his feedback
relations with the phenomenon investigated. Thus a second level is introduced, hence Second
Order Cybernetics.
If the scientist as an observer is no longer neutral and external to his object of
investigation, but influences this object and is being influenced by it in turn, it becomes of
primary interest what happens in such, more or less closed, feedback circles, that is, how they
are self-organizing. A central topic in the work of Heinz von Foerster has always been self-
organization, but also the consequences which result from the fact that the scientist cannot be
considered an objective observer anymore, but has to be seen as somebody who is actively
involved in the very phenomena he investigates. This raises the question of responsibility and
ethics and the associated questions of how (scientific) knowledge is possible and what
scientific knowledge is under such premises.
The subtitle of this book, "Conversations on Epistemology and Ethics", points precisely
to the latter two issues. To develop his thoughts on self-organization and cybernetics, Heinz
von Foerster, being a physicist who had worked on the intricacies of quantum theory, was
obliged first of all to develop concepts of epistemology adequate to take into account these
issues. This made him one of the prominent founders of constructivism, along with Ernst von
Glasersfeld. Constructivism implies that knowledge does not come from some outside,
objective, ontological reality, but is constructed inside the respective system, for instance the
human being itself. These are topics von Foerster had developed in numerous publications and
lectures, often drawing on mathematical examples and formalisms.
The present book is quite different in this respect. Heinz von Foerster, sometimes called
the "Socrates of cybernetic thought", presents the central points of his works in a truly Socratic
way. This book is the documentation of a series of conversations with Bernhard Poerksen, a
journalist from Hamburg specializing in science reporting. He first interviewed von Foerster in
1994 at an international conference in Hamburg. This dialogue with Poerksen, which started in
Hamburg, was continued later on in von Foerster's home in California in 1997 and led to the
present text (first published in German by Carl-Auer Systeme Verlag, Heidelberg). The
translation is excellent and does not leave any indication of the fact that the original text was
not written in English. This book provides a concise and understandable overview and
summary of the key issues and main lines of Heinz von Foerster's thinking about cybernetics
and constructivism. Bernhard Poerksen being no less Socratic than his counterpart, the
conversation documented is quite critical and brings the most difficult issues to the point -
without mathematics.
2. Contents
The title of the English edition hits the point and very precisely reflects the contents of
the book, which is about understanding systems and in particular self-organizing systems and
the second order view of systems and cybernetics. Such an understanding requires an
appropriate epistemological basis. This is discussed and developed in the first of the five parts
into which the book is divided, "Images of Reality...". In this part, which included four
chapters and fills more than a third of the whole book, von Foerster and Poerksen discuss: 1.
Biology of Perception; 2. Facets of Truth (including the ethical imperative resulting from
constructivism and the loss of the Archimedean point of truth and cognition as a consequence);
3. The Danger of the Label (which both reveals the risk of reification and ontologization as a
consequence of language and labels, along with the impossibility to get around language and
labels); and 4. Explaining the Explanation (making clear that cause and effect as well as
"immutable" laws of nature are human constructs. In the last part of this chapter the important
concepts of trivial and non-trivial machines (=systems) and the chances and problems implied
in interacting with them are explained).
This paves the way to the second part, "Perspectives in Practice...". In this part,
consequences of von Foerster's epistemology and cybernetic thinking for applications and
practical life are developed and illustrated by discussing four different fields: teaching and
education, psychotherapy, management, and communication (including mass media).
The third part, "Cybernetics...", takes the reader back to theoretical issues like
circularity, the fundamental principle of cybernetics, and the discussion of people and
machines, computers and minds, and the cybernetics of cybernetics. The last chapters of this
part resume the problem of epistemology, perception, and truth.
REVIEWS 25
Taking Heinz von Foerster's cybernetics of cybernetics and the role of the observer it
implies seriously, it is only consequent that Poerksen ask about the observer and scientist who
has developed and professed the theories discussed so far. Hence the fourth part of the book is
devoted to "Biographical Excursions...", the childhood and youth of von Foerster, his life
during the Second World War and the post-war period, and to his subsequent scientific career
in the New World, America.
The book is rounded off by a fifth part on "Knowledge and Ethics...". Here the two
discussants analyze and clarify what is possibly the most important consequence of Heinz von
Foerster's constructivism and cybernetic theories. This is that a human being constructing the
world is also responsible for this construction and cannot escape from that responsibility. The
responsibility, moreover, is very real and practical as all action and life of a human being is
based on its cognitive constructs. With regard to responsibility, this is a human condition very
similar to what Sartre had described with regard to freedom. Human beings cannot escape from
it; they can only develop and cultivate a false consciousness in order to remain unaware of it. A
lot of von Foerster's efforts in writing and talking were devoted precisely to destroying such
delusions.
3. Strengths
The book is a concise and entertaining introduction to Heinz von Foerster's philosophy
and scientific work. His conversations with Bernhard Poerksen, a highly competent
counterpart, make it easy and enjoyable to read, without loss of scientific and philosophical
depth and rigor. This lively and fascinating dialogue, illustrated by quite a number of
anecdotes, is intriguing with the most important concepts of cybernetics, second order
cybernetics, and constructivism explained in a non-technical and non-mathematical language.
The reader will find the book difficult to put down.
The dialogue carves out very well von Foerster's key concerns, which it is essential to
keep in mind in order to understand what might appear as one-sidedness or as deficiencies and
limitations in his theories. Poerksen, who asks the right questions throughout the book, brings
this out excellently; however, he does not always get very clear answers. This may be because
it is part of von Foerster's didactics. The latter explicitly states: "My objective is to cast doubt".
He wants to be a Socratic who breaks up petrified views and thinking as codified, for instance,
in conventional science and philosophy. That is why he argues so strongly against ontologies,
against reifications, against definitions shutting off other possibilities of thinking and other
views of the world, and, as one of the inventors of constructivism, objects to being called a
constructivist. Instead, he makes a case for freedom and responsibility, for a world of wonder
and surprise, and wants to encourage his readers not to limit thinking but rather to think
unconventionally. His ethical imperative is: "Act always as to increase the number of choices".
Heinz von Foerster bases his arguments on often highly innovative scientific cybernetic
findings and considerations. He understands, for instance, "computing" in a much wider sense
than numerical calculations and provides arguments that knowledge and truth are not static
commodities (to be sold through the Internet, for example), but processes without a final end-
26 REVIEWS
point. According to his view, human knowledge is not stored in the memory like on a hard disk
of a computer, but it is constantly produced and re-produced. This goes along with the idea that
logic, as well, is not a static set of rules of nature, but a process invented by humans, and this
includes paradoxes and self-reference. The latter are phenomena that are banned from
conventional logics.
No wonder, that for Heinz von Foerster ontology is a "terrible idea" and that he objects
to putting things into fixed and clear-cut categories and nice definitions in order to avoid
ontology and to keep human thinking as open as possible not blocking any possibilities of
choice. This is a very important plea against the conventional sciences of ultimate truths and
immutable laws of nature, but also against ordinary people's quest for absolute certainties and
perfect recipes for all and everything. Von Foerster and Poerksen develop in their dialogue the
alternative of a truly "modern" man, who is a "kybernetes", a helmsman of his ship of life in an
ever-changing world of uncertainties. It is a concept of man that fits the contemporary world,
which offers little certainty and no Archimedean points anymore.
This is roughly the message Heinz von Foerster distills from his lifelong scientific work
and which he wants to bring across in this book.
4. Weaknesses
It is evident that such a program cannot be worked out in every detail in only 160
pages. Von Foerster does not and cannot develop all the ideas to the end and not all of
Poerksen's questions get a fully satisfying answer. In particular, the examples of application in
the second part of the book provide valuable insights and suggestions with a practical
orientation, but still tend to remain far from being consistently practical and fully down to
earth. The insistence on avoiding definitions and labels, which is perfectly suitable to open up
the way to new thinking, is an obstacle, however, to resolving practical problems and to action.
Poerksen stresses the practical necessity of "labels" and definitions and justly tells his partner
"You are exaggerating!" Von Foerster admits the point. Not appreciating "jargon" he risks,
however, to question without providing answers and (practical) solutions. Without fixing
concepts and ideas, at least temporarily, and without eliminating possible choices, decisions
and actions are not possible. Yet this is not Heinz von Foerster's principal concern here.
While these issues may be considered to result from a lack of space or from von
Foerster's particular concerns and didactics, some other problems, which Poerksen points out
very well, have to be considered as unresolved fundamentals that require further development.
A first point concerns the very roots of constructivism. The first and evident alternative
to an ontology, which von Foerster abhors, is solipsism. If an objective external world,
independent from myself as an observer, does not exist, it is only myself who exists. This is
what solipsism says. Like other constructivists von Foerster also refutes solipsism, but avoids
an answer to the question, "What IS out there?" While other constructivists, like von
Glasersfeld, tell us "We cannot know, but if our knowledge leads to practical success, it cannot
be all wrong", von Foerster does not or at least he does not clearly accept such a practical
"criterion of truth". If there is no such criterion, however, complete arbitrariness (which
REVIEWS 27
5. Final Assessment
with the promise of the possibility of providing a new orientation and a new strategy for life in
a highly complex, highly dynamic, and highly uncertain world such as ours at the beginning of
the 3rd Millennium. This, however, is not the guidance provided by Archimedean points,
immutable laws of nature, and eternal truths. It is the orientation and strategy of a "kybernetes"
traveling the oceans of life with their ever changing conditions, inventing and constructing
ever-changing solutions to all the new problems encountered and doing this with the little
equipment and resources available on board. This is what self-organization is all about.
Understanding Systems can be fully recommended to any reader who is interested in
understanding the contemporary world or is seeking strategies for coping with it, irrespective
of discipline or specialization. It is a well-rounded and sufficiently self-contained book which
should be understandable in itself for the general reader as well, without requiring familiarity
with other specific authors or other publications of von Foerster himself. To the specialist,
however, it may serve as an excellent overall summary and clarification of many ideas and
concepts, which are otherwise distributed over the numerous publications of Heinz von
Foerster.
Bernd R. Hornung
Philipps-University Marburg
NEWSLETTER 14
The year of the Brisbane World Congress is over now, and we have turned our look
ahead towards a whole set of new scientific projects and activities. During the past half-year
you have received quite a number of e-mails from the outgoing board showing you that we
were busily laying the foundations for this next period. This meant we had to organize the
elections of the new board as well as engaging in organizational measures and the updating of
our membership files.
As your old and new president I want to thank you very much for the trust and
confidence you expressed by your votes, both personally and on behalf of the entire new board.
The fact that the new 2002-2006 board of RC51 is composed both of re-elected members and a
number of new faces will hopefully provide an excellent basis for an appropriate
sociocybernetic mix of continuity, change, and innovation in the work of the new team.
The intensive administrative activity with which we bothered all of you over the past
months was an indispensable building stone for our future, quite ambitious program of
scientific activities. As our name says, we are according to the ISA Statutes a Research
Committee, or nowadays we should rather say perhaps a Research Community, not just
conference organizers. This implies intensive communications among and with ALL of our
members. In spite of information society and cyberspace, which we evidently use extensively,
this is not self-evident. An e-mail address is not enough, if it does not work, if it keeps
changing, if it is not in regular use, if the person behind it does not find the necessary time to
respond because of overload of information and work. That is why we insisted and will insist
also in the future on getting also your fax, phone, and snailmail coordinates. Not just to satisfy
our bureaucratic instincts! Although I have spent myself quite a number of evenings on
detective work to get in touch with lost members, this cannot be the job of the board. It is
clearly the responsibility and duty of each individual member to keep us up-to-date on his or
her whereabouts and to remain communicationally reachable.
We urgently needed this update of membership data for the elections of the new board,
but also for our future organizational development as an RC. The latter is in part influenced by
the decisions, rules and regulations of the ISA, our parent organization. The number of sessions
we can have at the World Congresses of Sociology, for instance, depends on the number of our
ISA members, just like the possibilities to get different kinds of subsidies from the ISA.
Moreover, the ISA meanwhile obliges all RCs to raise RC membership fees. We have reported
on this in our previous Newsletter and the new board will have to implement this decision. I
can assure you, however, that the stage has been set already to do so in a member-friendly way.
More on this issue you will find inside the Newsletter.
I expect that we soon can consider all of these organizational steps as accomplished, so
that the new board and, of course, you as members of our research community can fully and
vigorously concentrate on our future scientific activities and the further development of
Sociocybernetics.
Bernd R. Hornung
President, ISA RC51
In the aftermath of last summer's World Congress of Sociology in Brisbane, Australia, RC51
embarked on a much-needed administrative consolidation that mainly concerned updating the
membership roles. We are indebted to our President, Bernd Hornung and Past President, Felix
Geyer who took on this monumental project and brought it to a successful conclusion. Indeed,
an accurate membership list was found to be necessary in order to proceed with the election of
a new board. Much of this issue of the Newsletter is concerned with these two activities.
Finally, all members of RC51 are invited to submit abstracts for next summer's annual meeting
in Corfu, profiled further down.
Richard E. Lee
Secretary, ISA RC51
3. NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN RC 51
3.1 RC51 and its Parent Organization, The International Sociological Association (ISA)
For the ISA the number of ISA members of a Research Committee (RC) is decisive with
regard to several aspects.
The ISA determines the number of sessions an RC is allowed to have at the quadrennial
World Congresses of Sociology - the next one to be held in 2006 in Durban, South Africa - on
the basis of the number of the RC's ISA members. But also subsidies (e.g. for newsletters,
travel, or congress fees) are determined on this basis.
The ISA, as our parent organization, provides the overhead facilities and resources
from which all of our members profit. These include the organization of the World Congresses
of Sociology, the availability of a number of journals at very cheap rates, the possibility to sign
up for more than 50 Research Committees in just as many subfields of sociology almost free of
charge, a regular ISA Bulletin, and a membership directory. Membership in the ISA is
NEWSLETTER 14 31
therefore highly recommended. It comes at a rate of between $25 US (for the low income
countries) and $255 US (for the high income countries) per FOUR years.
At the last World Congress of Sociology in Brisbane in July 2002 the ISA Executive
Committee announced its decision that all Research Committees will be obliged to raise their
own membership fees. Up to that point RC51 was one of the very few Research Committees
that did not levy any membership fees whatsoever. We have managed to operate on a zero
budget thanks to the cooperation of our board members and the institutions to which they are
attached, but also thanks to the consequent and intensive use of email and the Internet. This
situation had to change, but the outgoing board of RC51 decided to keep membership fees at a
minimum, that is:
- US$ 25 for regular members in ISA country category A per 4 years
- US$ 15 for student members in ISA country category A per 4 years
- US$ 10 for members (regular and student) in ISA country categories B and C per 4 years.
Exceptions to these rates are possible upon request in cases of urgent needs.
ISA members can pay their RC fees through the ISA secretariat, and will soon receive
an invitation to do so, while modalities of payment for non-ISA members still have to be
specified and will be communicated before long.
These were among others important reasons for the membership updating campaign as
described below.
As you know, our board decided at the World Congress of Sociology last July in Brisbane to
update our membership files. Members are formally defined as those who have sent us a duly
filled out membership form and questionnaire. Moreover, it is strongly recommended, but not
obligatory, for RC51 members to be also members of the ISA.
To update our membership files was urgent and indispensable for a number of reasons:
- To be able to communicate with our members we need up-to-date information about their
whereabouts.
- To be able to plan our scientific activities for the next four year period, especially our annual
International Conferences of Sociocybernetics and our participation in the next World
Congress of Sociology, we need information about the interests and intentions of our
members in these respects.
- To be able to comply with the rules and regulations of the ISA, our parent organization, and
to enjoy the different advantages it offers to the RCs, we need reliable and up-to-date
information about who and how many among our members are ISA members in good
standing.
- To be able to carry out the elections for the new board of the RC in compliance with the
standards requested by the ISA up-to-date membership information was essential.
- The membership data we had were often up to seven years old and therefore often not valid
anymore. Snailmail addresses as well as office and home phone and fax numbers had
changed in quite a number of cases meanwhile. Numerous members obtained a website
(URL) since they had registered for RC51. We could not count on all such changes
32 NEWSLETTER 14
the materials again as they had not received them in legible form or could not open them etc.
Those who did not send the filled out forms yet still remain on the non-response list. The
membership of all these non-respondents was cancelled meanwhile. Of course, they can sign
up for new membership again, e.g. through our website, just like any other person interested in
RC51.
- Cancellations: 18 cases: Finally, we received 18 cancellations. These are usually from
members who are not active anymore in sociocybernetics, having moved on to other
fields of interests. We wish them good luck in their further careers and herewith express
the hope that their membership in RC51 had been an interesting stimulus for their
future scientific activities.
- Remaining cases: Although our membership updating campaign has ended now, we still
expect replies from a number of people:
- Some of the nonrespondents promised to send us their membership forms and
question- naires, but did not yet do so.
- Persons interested in RC51 membership according to information from the ISA
secretariat will once more be emailed, to the extent they have email, while those
without email will be snailmailed or faxed, asking them to provide us with the email
address e.g. of a colleague who is willing to transmit the messages.
A precondition for organizing and handling the elections properly was to have an up-to-date
membership list, both with regard to the means of communication, in particular functioning
email, and with regard to the statutory criteria for members in good standing, as only the latter
have the right to vote.
Only after completing the membership update the elections could be organized
properly, which was a much easier task than the previous one. The duly filled out ballot sheets
had to be sent by email to Richard Lee and Felix Geyer. As the appointed secretary and the
honorary president respectively, these two board members had no personal interest in the
outcome of the elections and hence were the most neutral persons available to do this job.
A first step towards electing a new board had been taken already at the last business
meeting during the World Congress of Sociology in Brisbane. There the president of RC51 had
presented the list of candidates as proposed by the outgoing board according to our statutes.
There had been no objections against this list at the business meeting, but also no propositions
for additional or counter-candidates.
A further effort to receive proposals for counter-candidates was made in the context of
the membership update campaign. The list of proposed candidates was added to the major
mailings and the RC51 members were urged to propose additional candidates.
A first email concerning the voting process itself was sent on December 1 together with
the ballot sheet and a list of the affiliations of the candidates. The deadline for returning the
ballots was December 16. Reminders were sent on December 9, when 68 ballots had been
received, on December 12, when 88 ballots had come in, and finally on December 16, when
109 ballots had arrived. By December 19, the last deadline, the total number of ballots received
NEWSLETTER 14 35
We herewith congratulate these candidates with their election or re-election. We will make an
effort to soon have their photographs on the website, together with short descriptions of their
functions and their backgrounds. One person, however, is still missing on this new 2002-2006
board: our program coordinator for the XVIth World Congress of Sociology in Durban 2006.
As this is an extremely important position, this board member will be appointed at a later time
by the new board
The 63,3 % voter turnout may nowadays be considered quite acceptable for Western
democracies. Nevertheless, we feel it is rather low. In part, this lack of interest may be due to
the fact that no alternative candidates were offered. In spite of several requests for additional
proposals it is quite puzzling at first sight that our 180 members in good standing apparently
could not suggest or did not feel the need to suggest even one single counter-candidate for any
of the board functions.
Apparently this is in part a reflection of the fact that most members do not know one
another and thus generally could not suggest other persons than the ones proposed to them by
the outgoing board. Moreover, in case of a suggestion it was necessary to approach two other
members to second the proposal, which led once more to the same problem. Also the
possibility provided by our statutes to suggest oneself as a candidate was not used and does not
seem to be attractive.
If this situation is to change in the future and if a real choice between different
candidates for each of the board functions is to be possible, the willingness of our members to
36 NEWSLETTER 14
get more actively involved, and to be available as candidate for a board function, clearly has to
increase. The experience of these past months has shown that obviously the members of RC51
have to get to know each other a lot better than they do now. This, of course, is much more
difficult to achieve in a large RC like ours than in a small one.
Up till now we have tried in several ways to further this goal by trying to offer
opportunities for more intensive interaction. In some cases these have not been terribly
successful, in others we are clearly on the right way. Already a few years ago we have tried to
get our internet discussion group "Sociocybernet" off the ground, which is not to be confused
with Mike Terpstras discussion list on sociocybernetics, which deals specifically with
Luhmanns systems theory and is not restricted to RC51 members. Quite a few of our board
members have tried to initiate and stimulate discussions about pertinent issues of
sociocybernetics. Unfortunately this discussion list has died a fast and silent death.
Another effort was to publish the website addresses (URLs) of our members on our
own RC51 website at http://www.unizar.es/sociocybernetics/webs.html. While visiting these
websites can give a fairly good idea of the interests of the person behind the website, we have
the impression that this possibility is only sparingly used. Our main avenue of promoting
scientific and personal contacts between our members - and even research cooperation - which
has turned out to be very successful consists of our annual International Conferences of
Sociocybernetics, which are attended usually by some 20-40 persons out of the 180 members
presently on our membership list. Also a success, we feel, are our Newsletter, the Journal of
Sociocybernetics, and other publications, although indeed we have received very little
feedback on all of these.
All of these difficulties, which have become apparent, are evidently not specific for
RC51. Instead, they have to be seen realistically in a wider context. We all are suffering
chronically from lack of time, overload of work, information overload (or even "infoxication",
as somebody put it recently), and we all have been also witnessing over the past years the
increasing financial constraints and continuous reductions of the support, financial and
otherwise, which our institutions are still ready and able to provide for our scientific activities,
e.g., in the framework of RC51.
We have to take this into account when trying to find new possibilities to make RC51
still more attractive for our members with the limited means that are available. This certainly
will be a very big challenge for the new board.
One such possibility to make RC51 perhaps a more close-knit group in the long run
might be to present - on our RC51 website at the University of Zaragoza, Spain - short
overviews of the publications of our members and of the projects they are working on at the
moment. This evidently depends on reliable communication with our members and hence on
up-to-date membership data. Under the current European data protection and copyright
legislation it also, of course, requires your explicit and informed consent. The new board will
discuss these perspectives in the near future and will then approach you on these issues.
This and similar initiatives will have to be worked out by our new board, and we hope
you will join us in wishing the members of the new board every possible success in their
efforts to promote Sociocybernetics within the international sociological community and
beyond.
NEWSLETTER 14 37
With best wishes for an enjoyable holiday season and a happy and productive New
Year,
As became clear at the ISA conference in Brisbane the field of Sociocybernetics is a very
promising field. However as RC51 we have to realize that not all discussions about
Sociocybernetics are taking place at our conferences (including Interim Conferences), in our
publications and inside our Journal & Newsletter. To realize the ambitions of Sociocybernetics
we have to join efforts with other groups, not only in Sociology but also in other disciplines. In
this context we are glad to note that a number of our members are active in/between and
outside of RC51. We like to introduce in this newsletter two of them: Mike Terpstra and Sren
Brier. They recently discussed the way interdisciplinary media of Sociocybernetics such as
mailing lists and journals can stimulate each other. That invitation for interdisciplinary
communication was started by our outgoing board member Mike Terpstra:
The mailing list, Jottings on Luhmann, began early in 1998 with Jesper Tkke (Denmark),
F.D. Bunsen (Germany) and several board members from the Working Group on
Sociocybernetics, now known as RC51. The group was originally hosted by LISTBOT, then
transferred to the present host, eGroups at Yahoo.
The original intent was to collaborate on papers in progress concerning Niklas Luhmann
and his theoretical work. Members of RC51 were geographically isolated from other experts in
the field of Luhmann's theory. Collaboration was envisioned for Sociocybernetics scholars to
prepare to present papers at the1998 Montreal ISA World Congress of Sociology. By the way,
it was at this congress that the "Working Group on Sociocybernetics" won approval as a full
"Research Committee on Sociocybernetics". Although this list has never been an official RC51
mailing list, an RC51 Board member worked almost full time for the first year to develop the
list as a forum for others to share work on Luhmann and solicit membership to RC51.
The focus expanded to include other sociocybernetics and social systems approaches.
Although we primarily focus on the works of Niklas Luhmann, following the example of the
German Luhmann List, discussion was welcomed on works from theorists such as von
Bertalanffy. The reason for the emphasis on Luhmann is that his work has been largely ignored
by American scholarship. Postings are encouraged on how to collaborate and work together to
develop awareness of sociocybernetics.
Thank you, Sren Brier, for your work with Cybernetics & Human Knowing.
Subscribing to this journal should be high on academic priority lists as a way to advance
38 NEWSLETTER 14
research and education on sociocybernetics. Subscribers are needed to Cybernetics & Human
Knowing to make it grow and become a more and more prestigious place to publish. This is
what can be done to get our work recognized and pave the way for research money, courses
and positions - so the knowledge can flourish.
Sren Brier welcomed that invitation and in turn wrote an introduction about the
advantages of using email discussion lists and publications in the Journal Cybernetics &
Human Knowing.
into the back issues you will find many papers on Luhmann and even a whole issue devoted to
him.
The journal has now survived for 10 years, publishing four issues of 96 pages every
year. The number of papers and their quality have been growing steadily over these years and
so have the Journal's reputation and number of subscriptions. But there is still a long way to go
to make it a major player in the global research community. For that you need to join the
project by taking out an individual subscription and try to make your institution to take one too,
which is often very difficult because of the interdisciplinary character of the journal. However,
Imprint Academic offers you 10% reduction if you enclose proof of your membership of
RC51. Then you should of course send in high quality papers to the journal or suggestions for
theme issues. Let me introduce the journal further by quoting its own introduction to this
interdisciplinary area of knowledge.
Scientific endeavor in the post-modern age is becoming increasingly complex and
transdisciplinary. Researchers and practitioners in the arts and the natural,
medical and social sciences realize that the sharing of knowledge is desirable,
necessary and possible. For people working in the IT-sector, second-order
cybernetics can be translated to the understanding of his/her cognitive relation to
the artificial system "user". In this, Cybernetics & Human Knowing is a valuable
complementary to technologically oriented magazines as we provide a rich
epistemological soil for the emergence of future metaphors. Our focus is on the
need for change in the basic concepts of ourselves, our cultures, world views,
values and views of what "genuine" knowledge is, and on the call for a new
exchange between theoreticians and practitioners. A basic feature of this work is
the attempt to integrate scientific thinking with ethical and aesthetic perspectives
in both theory and practice, in an attempt to bridge what C.P. Snow called "The
Two Cultures.
The journal as such is an autonomous knowledge and communication system, partly affiliated
with the American Society for Cybernetics but with editors from many other cybernetic and
systems organizations and journals and interested researchers from semiotics. Because of the
interdisciplinary character, articles are generally written in such a way that readers from other
domains can understand them. Authors from a wide range of disciplines, whose common
ground is a passion for interdisciplinary, cybernetic, and semiotic description and explanation,
will write with sensitivity for language that will make their ideas clear and their subject
fascinating. Scientific papers are of course peer reviewed. Now and then, space will be given
to more technical papers and a paper from a practitioner. The journal is thus a meeting place
for those developing cybernetic and semiotics with those doing cybernetics and systemic work.
An artist, whose contribution is an integral part of the journal, does the layout and illustrations
of every issue. Within this frame, embodying the creative with the (multi)disciplinary, the
journal has a high scientific standard and integrity - following Gregory Bateson's model of
rigor and imagination.
The journal also supports columns where prominent researchers express their views on
various aspects of the subject area. This strategy makes the journal interesting and readable for
those interested in cybernetic and semiotic practice in government, industry, education,
40 NEWSLETTER 14
therapeutic fields and the various fields of information and communication sciences.
For vol. 10 (2003) the plans are that the first issue of the year will be a memorial and
honorary issue for the creator of biosemiotics Thomas Sebeok with articles by famous
semioticians such as John Deely, Marcel Danesi, Kalevi Kull, Susan Petrelli and August
Ponzio. I am very pleased with and grateful for the papers we have received. It will be an
excellent introduction to the whole field and a pointer to where the field can go in the coming
years. The next issue "From Biologically Grounded Social Theory to Practical Action" will be
edited by Wolf-Michel Roth from Canada and report on learning experiments and theories in
the light of Pierre Bourdieu and others. Authors will be Michael Roth, Ken Tobin, Kate
Scantlebury, Rowhea Elmsky. The last two issues will be a double issue in Honor of Heinz von
Foerster, the creator of second order cybernetics that I am co-editing with Ranulph Glanville. It
will have scholarly papers, review of his latest books, an interview and a section of personal
remembrance of von Foerster from scientists and scholars all over the world that have worked
with Heinz von Foerster and have known him. Amongst those that promised contributions are
Humberto Maturana, Monika Broecker, Louis H. Kauffman, Alfred Mueller, Leon van Schaik,
Gerard de Zeeuw, Dirk Baecker, Marcelo Pakmann and Frederick Steier.
All processing of articles, refereeing and proof reading is electronic. So feel free to
send in files attached to e-mails to sbr@kvl.dk.
The death of one of the founding fathers of second order cybernetics is an occasion to
remember the impressive contribution of Heinz von Foerster to our field of research. We do
this here by reproducing two obituaries published by RC51 members Bernard Scott and
Ranulph Glanville in The Independent Newspaper and The Times, and by publishing - in this
issue of the Journal of Sociocybernetics - a book review by our RC51 President of a book
where Heinz von Foerster (re)constructs his ideas in a Socratic Dialogue with his co-author.
As a young Austrian physicist in the postwar years with little English, on the strength
of an original thesis set out in a paper entitled Memory: a quantum physical examination,
Heinz von Foerster visited the United States. There, he was taken under the wing of the
psychiatrist, logician and neurologist, Warren McCulloch, one of the extraordinary visionary
polymaths who founded the discipline that came to be known as Cybernetics (from the Greek
Kybernetes, steersman). Others included the mathematician Norbert Wiener, the
anthropologists Gregory Bateson and Margaret Mead and the British psychiatrist and
neurologist, W Ross Ashby). McCulloch chaired a series of interdisciplinary conferences for
the Macy Foundation, where with his polymath colleagues the topic of Circular causality and
feedback mechanisms in biological and social systems was debated. The young von Foerster
was invited to take on the job of chief editor of the proceedings of the conferences, partly as a
NEWSLETTER 14 41
way for him to improve his English. Around that time, Wiener published his classic work
entitled Cybernetics: Control and Communication in the Animal and Machine. From then on,
the conferences were known as the Macy Conferences on Cybernetics.
On McCullochs recommendation, in 1951 von Foerster took up the position of
Professor of Signal Processing at the University of Illinois. In1958 he founded the Biological
Computer Laboratory (BCL) and remained director thereof until his retirement in 1976. At the
BCL, he hosted a collegiate of visiting scholars, a formidable list that includes Ross Ashby,
Gotthard Gunther, Lars Loefgren, Gordon Pask, Humberto Maturana, Ernst von Glasersfeld,
Stafford Beer and Francisco Varela. Arguably, without the leadership and inspiration of von
Foerster, we would not have Pasks conversation theory, Maturana and Varelas theory of
autopoietic systems, von Glasersfelds radical constructivism, the theory of social systems
developed by Niklas Luhmann, or the sociocybernetics of Felix Geyer and others.
After retirement, von Foerster remained active as a scholar, an emissary for cybernetics
and as a mentor for a generation of younger cyberneticians. I include myself in this number,
along with Ranulph Glanville, Dirk Baecker, Paul Pangaro, Sren Brier and Luis Rocha, to
name but some.
Cybernetics thrives to this day as, depending on ones perspective, a specialism within
the systems sciences, a complementary approach to that of the general theory of systems, first
proposed by Ludwig von Bertallanfy in the 1950s , as in the phrase cybernetics and systems
or as the discipline that gives looser approaches such as systems thinking or artificial
intelligence clear and firm intellectual foundations. Heinz von Foerster understood
cybernetics in this latter sense and, indeed, may be regarded as the chief architect in making
clear the full structure of cybernetics as a holistic transdiscipline that provides models and
concepts for dealing in a non-trivial manner with a range of formally analogous issues
concerned with the form and behaviour of complex systems within a wide range of specialist
disciplines (as examples, biology, psychology, sociology, economics, management studies) and
also as a metadiscipline that comments on the processes whereby human observers come
together as a community and establish the many and varied research programmes that make up
the natural and social sciences and their many domains of application.
The development of cybernetics as a holistic transdiscipline was brought to fruition in
the 1950s and 60s, with major contributions from the polymaths already mentioned but also
with significant contributions from two Britons, the enfant terrible of cybernetics, Gordon
Pask, whose early contributions included an adaptive entertainment system called
musicolour and chemical computers that grew ears, and his close friend, Stafford Beer,
who, with his viable system model, almost singlehandedly developed management as a
cybernetic science. Von Foersters contributions include a now classic paper published in
1960, On self-organising systems and their environments, in which he argues that systems
that are truly self-organising will always expand beyond the frames of reference adopted by
observers to model their behavior; they are in principle unpredictable unless by training,
conditioning or other constraints are made to become so, in which case they become trivial
machines rather than the interesting non-trivial machines they were formerly. (Note:
following Ross Ashby, in cybernetics machine and system are synonyms for any observed
entity that persists).
42 NEWSLETTER 14
5.2 Heinz von Foerster: Early exponent of cybernetics and 'circular causality'
Ranulph Glanville (Published in The Times, London October 25, 2002)
As a youth in Vienna, Heinz von Foersters first claim to fame was as a magician. But
more important, and to some people just as magical as his tricks, was his transformation of
cybernetics (in the decade around 1970) by insisting that the observer must be taken into
account in the description of any system, because he may affect the processes being observed.
From this he went on to develop systems to modify the formulation of the systems of classical
cybernetics, in an extension of the field that became known as the cybernetics of cybernetics
or second-order cybernetics.
Heinz von Foerster (originally Frster) was born in Vienna, the Eldest son of Emil von
Frster and his wife Lilith, and educated in philosophy and logic by the Vienna Circle, and in
physics at Viennas Technical University. He completed his doctorate at the University of
Breslau in 1944.
His family was distinguished and held a prominent position in the intellectual life of
Vienna: friends and relatives included the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein, the playwright
Hugo von Hoffmansthal, the painter Erwin Lang, and the Wiesenthal family.
The family supported Josef Matthias Hauer, the inventor of an alternative to
Schoenbergs 12-tone technique. His grandfather was architect of the Vienna Ring. He had a
brother, Ulrich, and a sister, Erika, and was especially close to his cousin Martin Lang, with
whom he studied magic and roamed Austrias mountains in winter and in summer. In 1939 he
married the actress Mai Strmer, with whom he had three sons.
During the war von Foerster lived and worked in Berlin, where he moved to disguise
the Jewish element in his ancestry, and did research in short-wave and plasma physics. At the
end of the war he found a way back to Austria, where he worked in the telephone industry
while also reporting on art and science for the Austro-American radio station Rot-Wei-Rot,
his communication skills and showmanship flourishing. Meanwhile, he was working on his
book Memory: A Quantum Physical Examination. To promote this, he moved to the United
States in 1949, where (with barely a word of English) he was taken up by the mathematician,
neuroscientist and philosopher Warren McCulloch, with whom he communicated in the
language of mathematics.
The trip was a turning-point. McCulloch was then chairing the Macy Conferences on
44 NEWSLETTER 14
Circular Causal and Feedback Mechanisms in Biological and Social Systems in New York,
which were attended by the anthropologists Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson, the
computation theorist John von Neumann and the mathematician Norbert Wiener.
To improve his English, von Foerster was made secretary and editor. His first act was
to add Cybernetics to the conference title. Together with Wieners book Cybernetics (1948),
these conferences gave form and substance to the emerging discipline. The study of circular
causalitycan now be said to be the real heart of cybernetics. McCulloch arranged for von
Foerster to become director of the University of Illinois tube laboratory. Von Foerster imported
his family and lived in Champaign until his retirement in 1976, when he moved into a house
that he built himself, with his architect son, above the Pacific outside Pescadero, California.
In 1958 von Foerster founded the Biological Computer Laboratory, attracting
considerable funding. As well as a cohort of students, he hosted most of the distinguished
scholars in cybernetics for residencies, and the laboratory became the worlds most advanced
centre for the development of cybernetic thinking. The first parallel computers were built there,
and crucial research was carried out on the fast electronic switching that is critical to todays
computers.
Although von Foerster is known in some circles for his excursion into demographics
(when he started lively debate in the journal Science), he was most important for sponsoring
radical work in such subjects as the organisation of the living and the foundations of
mathematics and logic.
He tended to hide his own contribution behind the work of others, but his understanding
of the reflexive nature of systems led to profound changes in the understanding of knowledge
and of our connection with the world in which we find ourselves. For many he reintroduced the
amazement of wonder.
Having held Guggenheim fellowships in 1956-57 and 1963-64, von Foerster won many
honours. He was president of the Wenner-Gren Foundation, 1963-65, and of the Society for
General Systems Research, 1976-77. He was elected to a fellowship of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science in 1980, and in 1996 the University of Vienna
made him an honorary professor. Last year he won the first Viktor Frankl Prize. He published
some 200 scientific papers and several books, and gave more than a thousand lectures around
the world. He is survived by his wife, Mai, and two sons. Heinz von Foerster, cybernetician,
was born on November 13, 1911. He died on October 2, 2002, aged 90.
[As you may know, one of the other founding fathers of the logic of recursive causality
(or better: recursivity), Stafford Beer, also recently died. In our next Newsletter we will
publish an obituary for Stafford Beer by one of our members.]
6. UPCOMING CONFERENCES
In the following we present as usual some short information about upcoming conferences that
may be of interest to you. Please note that if you want to participate in some of them, you have
to very soon send your abstract. We first of all present some detailed information about our
NEWSLETTER 14 45
own conference this summer in Corfu, which can be considered as a preparation for our
conference next year in Lisbon, which will be organized in cooperation with the well-known
Gulbenkian Foundation.
2. The Opening of Systems Theory, Copenhagen, Denmark, May 23-25, 2003. The
Center for Corporate Communication (CCC) at the Copenhagen Business School invites
researchers to a conference about the systems theory of Niklas Luhmann, its relationship
to other theories and its usefulness with regard to empirical work. The conference has the
twofold purpose of testing systems theory in relation to other theories and in relation to
empirical research. The thematic centre of this opening of systems theory is the
organisation theory of Niklas Luhmann; however, other elements of systems theory are
also welcome. The theoretical centre is the question of second-order observation.
Abstracts of approximately 400 words should be sent to Center for Corporate
Communication, ccc@cbs.dk before February 1 2003. Further details will be available on
the CCC website: http://asp.cbs.dk/ccc/luhmann.asp
3. Environment and Society, Wageningen, The Netherlands, June 13-15, 2003. A workshop
on Governing Environmental Flows: Reinventing the Environmental State in Global
Modernity. Abstracts shall be submitted by 15 February 2003 to:
Peter Oosterveer, peter.oosterveer@wur.nl
Fax: 31 317 483990.
For further information see http://www.sls.wageningen-ur.nl/es/
5. Agoras of the Global Village, Crete, Greece, International Society for the System Sciences,
6 - 11 July. This conference of the ISSS (International Society for the Systems Sciences) has
the above theme, which has been chosen to focus attention on: (a) the challenge facing
humanity as it transforms from "evolutionary consciousness" to "conscious evolution," and (b)
the role systems thinking must play in constructing 21st Century Agoras in the context of
globalization.
Globalization is being described by many as an emerging new system of world order
that has accelerated following the end of the Cold War order in 1989. Systems thinking must
make clear what is being eliminated and what constructed by globalization. We must rise to the
challenge of democratizing the processes of conscious evolution to ensure that globalization
NEWSLETTER 14 47
7. The 21st International Conference of The System Dynamics Society, New York, USA,
July 20 - 24, 2003. The conference theme of Economic Dynamics will bring together diverse
perspectives on the application of system dynamics to economic problems in order to foster
animated debate. In addition, submission is encouraged for work on all topics germane to
system dynamics including: applications of system dynamics and systems thinking in business,
engineering, health care and public policy, policy studies emphasizing the role of feedback,
advances in the modeling process and group model building , system dynamics contributions to
theory building in the social and natural sciences, complex nonlinear dynamic systems.
Works may be submitted from January 2, 2003 to March 23, 2003. For Call of works see:
http://www.systemdynamics.org/conf2003/callforpapers2002.html
9. Stockholm Music Acoustics Conference, Stockholm, Sweden, August 6 - 9, 2003. The tradition of
a large international conference on music acoustics in Stockholm every 10th year is now well
established. It all started way back in the 80s with SMAC 83, followed by SMAC 93 a decade later. A
SMAC 13 can be foreseen, as well. Like earlier SMACs, SMAC 03 will welcome contributions
from the entire field of music acoustics, including acoustics of musical instruments, physics-
48 NEWSLETTER 14
based modelling, the singing voice, music performance, music perception, and control of new
musical instruments.
See: http://www.speech.kth.se/smac03/
10. Agent Based Modeling Meets Gaming Simulation, Chiba, Japan, ISAGA 2003
Conference & Workshop, August 25-29. ISAGA2003 Conference: ISAGA2003 (The 34th
Annual Conference of the International Simulation and Gaming Association) will be held
August 25-29, 2003 at Kazusa Academia Park, Chiba, Japan.
Call for papers at: http://www.isaga2003.org
ABMMGS 2003 Workshop
In the ISAGA2003 conference we organize a special workshop called ABMMGS ( Agent
Based Modeling Meets Gaming Simulation ) on August 26 or/and 28, 2003.
Workshop Conveners:
Hiroshi Deguchi, Tokyo Institute of Technology (deguchi@dis.titech.ac.jp)
Kiyoshi Arai , Chiba Institute of Technology (k-arai@pf.it-chiba.ac.jp)
Klabbers, J.H.G. , University of Bergen (jklabbers@kmpc.nl)
We call for presentations at this workshop which are related to both ABM and Gaming
Simulation or its methodology. For example: Hybrid Model of ABM and Gaming Simulation,
Model docking between ABM and Gaming Simulation, Methodology for ABM and Gaming
Simulation, Design of ABM depending on Gaming Simulation, Design of Gaming Simulation
depending on ABM, Real World Grounding of ABM, Software Agents for Gaming Simulation,
Application of ABM to Social Sciences with Decision Makers.
Abstract (about 350 words) should be sent to secretary@isaga2003 by e-mail until 1st
March with following information: 1) Workshop Name: ABMMGS2003 (in ISAGA2003);
your name, email address and affiliation; title of your abstract, and abstract itself (350 words):
11. The Environment & Society Network, Murcia, Spain, September 23-26, 2003. Sixth
Conference of the European Sociological Association The Environment & Society Network
(ESN) of the European Sociological Association (ESA) invites papers on a Sustainability and
Social Change".
For more information on proposed themes see Environment & Society Network:
http://www.esa-esn.org
END OF NEWSLETTER 14