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The emergence of a true systemic science - the systemic one - capable of rigorously addressing the many problems posed by the design and management of the evolution of modern complex systems is therefore urgently needed if wants to be able to provide satisfactory answers to the many profoundly systemic challenges that humanity will have to face at the dawn of the third millennium. This emergence is of course not easy because one can easily understand that the development of the systemic is mechanically confronted with all the classical disciplines which can all pretend to bring part of the explanations necessary to the understanding of a system and which do not naturally see a good eye a new discipline claim to encompass them in a holistic approach ... The book of Jacques Printz is therefore an extremely important contribution to this new emerging scientific and technical discipline: it is indeed first of all one of the very few "serious" works published in French and offering a good introduction to the systemic. It gives an extremely broad vision of this field, taking a thread given by the architecture of systems, in other words by the part of the systemic that is interested in the structure of systems and their design processes, which allows everyone to fully understand the issues and issues of the systemic. We can only encourage the reader to draw all the quintessence of the masterful work of Jacques Printz which mixes historical reminders explaining how the systemic emerged, introduction to key concepts of the systemic and practical examples to understand the nature and the scope of the ideas introduced.

Table of Contents

  1. Cover
  2. Foreword
  3. Preface
  4. PART 1: The Foundations of Systemics
    1. 1 The Legacy of Norbert Wiener and the Birth of Cybernetics
    2. 1.1. The birth of systemics: the facts
    3. 1.2. Modeling for understanding: the computer science singularity
    4. 1.3. Engineering in the 21st Century
    5. 1.4. Education: systemics at MIT
    6. 2 At the Origins of System Sciences: Communication and Control
    7. 2.1. A little systemic epistemology
    8. 2.2. Systems sciences: elements of systemic phenomenology
    9. 2.3. The means of existence of technical objects
    10. 3 The Definitions of Systemics: Integration and Interoperability of Systems
    11. 3.1. A few common definitions
    12. 3.2. Elements of the system
    13. 3.3. Interactions between the elements of the system
    14. 3.4. Organization of the system: layered architectures
    15. 4 The System and its Invariants
    16. 4.1. Models
    17. 4.2. Laws of conservation
    18. 5 Generations of Systems and the System in the System
    19. 5.1. System as a language
    20. 5.2. The company as an integrated system
  5. PART 2: A World of Systems of Systems
    1. 6 The Problem of Control
    2. 6.1. An open world: the transition from analog to all-digital
    3. 6.2. The world of real time systems
    4. 6.3. Enterprise architectures: the digital firm
    5. 6.4. Systems of systems
    6. 7 Dynamics of Processes
    7. 7.1. Processes
    8. 7.2. Description of processes
    9. 7.3. Degenerative processes: faults, errors and “noise”
    10. 7.4. Composition of processes
    11. 7.5. Energetics of processes and systems
    12. 8 Interoperability
    13. 8.1. Means of systemic growth
    14. 8.2. Dynamics of the growth of systems
    15. 8.3. Limits of the growth of systems
    16. 8.4. Growth by cooperation
    17. 9 Fundamental Properties of Systems of Systems
    18. 9.1. Semantic invariance: notion of a semantic map
    19. 9.2. Recursive organization of the semantic
    20. 9.3. Laws of interoperability: control of errors
    21. 9.4. Genealogy of systems
  6. Conclusion
  7. List of Acronyms
  8. References
  9. Index
  10. End User License Agreement
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