What Is A System
What Is A System
What Is A System
A system is an organized collection of parts (or subsystems) that are highly integrated to
accomplish an overall goal. The system has various inputs, which go through certain
processes to produce certain outputs, which together, accomplish the overall desired goal
for the system. So a system is usually made up of many smaller systems, or subsystems.
For example, an organization is made up of many administrative and management
functions, products, services, groups and individuals. If one part of the system is changed,
the nature of the overall system is often changed, as well -- by definition then, the system
is systemic, meaning relating to, or affecting, the entire system. (This is not to be
confused with systematic, which can mean merely that something is methodological.
Thus, methodological thinking -- systematic thinking -- does not necessarily mean
systems thinking.)
Systems range from simple to complex. There are numerous types of systems. For
example, there are biological systems (for example, the heart), mechanical systems (for
example, a thermostat), human/mechanical systems (for example, riding a bicycle),
ecological systems (for example, predator/prey) and social systems (for example, groups,
supply and demand and also friendship). Complex systems, such as social systems, are
comprised of numerous subsystems, as well. These subsystems are arranged in
hierarchies, and integrated to accomplish the overall goal of the overall system. Each
subsystem has its own boundaries of sorts, and includes various inputs, processes, outputs
and outcomes geared to accomplish an overall goal for the subsystem. Complex systems
usually interact with their environments and are, thus, open systems.
A pile of sand is not a system. If you remove a sand particle, you have still got a pile of
sand. However, a functioning car is a system. Remove the carburetor and you no longer
have a working car.
System Theory
Systems theory was proposed in the 1940's by the biologist Ludwig von Bertalanffy ( :
General Systems Theory, 1968), and furthered by Ross Ashby (Introduction to
Cybernetics, 1956). von Bertalanffy was both reacting agaInst reductionism and
attempting to revive the unity of science. He emphasized that real systems are open to,
and interact with, their environments, and that they can acquire qualitatively new
properties through emergence, resulting in continual evolution. Rather than reducing an
entity (e.g. the human body) to the properties of its parts or elements (e.g. organs or
cells), systems theory focuses on the arrangement of and relations between the parts
which connect them into a whole (cf. holism). This particular organization determines a
system, which is independent of the concrete substance of the elements (e.g. particles,
cells, transistors, people, etc). Thus, the same concepts and principles of organization
underlie the different disciplines (physics, biology, technology, sociology, etc.),
providing a basis for their unification. Systems concepts include: system-environment
boundary, input, output, process, state, hierarchy, goal-directedness, and information.
The developments of systems theory are diverse (Klir, Facets of Systems Science,
1991), including conceptual foundations and philosophy (e.g. the philosophies of Bunge,
Bahm and Laszlo); mathematical modeling and information theory (e.g. the work of
Mesarovic and Klir); and practical applications. Mathematical systems theory arose from
the development of isomorphies between the models of electrical circuits and other
systems. Applications include engineering, computing, ecology, management, and family
psychotherapy. Systems analysis, developed independently of systems theory, applies
systems principles to aid a decisIon-maker with problems of identifying, reconstructing,
optimizing, and controlling a system (usually a socio-technical organization), while
taking into account multiple objectives, constraints and resources. It aims to specify
possible courses of action, together with their risks, costs and benefits. Systems theory is
closely connected to cybernetics, and also to system dynamics, which models changes in
a network of coupled variables (e.g. the "world dynamics" models of Jay Forrester and
the Club of Rome). Related ideas are used in the emerging "sciences of complexity",
studying self-organization and heterogeneous networks of interacting actors, and
associated domains such as far-from-equilibrium thermodynamics, chaotic dynamics,
artificial life, artificial intelligence, neural networks, and computer modeling and
simulation.