Edgeware - Primer

 


Aides
Metaphor

Comparing complexity science with traditional science

Complexity science addresses aspects of living systems which are neglected or understated in traditional approaches. Existing models in economics, management and physics were built on the foundation of Newtonian scientific principles. The dominant metaphor in Newtonian science is the machine. The universe and all its subsystems were seen as giant clocks or inanimate machines. The clocks or machines can be explained using reductionism - by understanding each part separately. The whole of the machine is the sum of the parts. The clockware perspective has led to great discoveries by focusing on the attributes and functioning of the 'parts' - whether of a human body or a human organization. The parts are controlled by a few immutable external forces or laws. The parts are not seen to have choice or self determination. The 'machines' are simple and predictable - you need only understand the few guiding external rules which determine how the parts will behave. There are limits to this perspective when understanding living systems, and in particular human organizations. Clearly humans are not machine parts without individual choice and so clockware is a necessary but not sufficient way of understanding complex systems.


Principles
Clockware/
Swarmware

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The Newtonian perspective assumes that all can be explained by the careful examination of the parts. Yet that does not work for many aspects of human behavior. We have all experienced situations in which the whole is not the sum of the parts - where we cannot explain the outcomes of a situation by studying the individual elements. For example, when a natural disaster strikes a community, we have seen spontaneous organization where there is no obvious leader, controller or designer. In these contexts, we find groups of people create outcomes and have impacts which are far greater than would have been predicted by summing up the resources and skills available within the group. In these cases, there is self-organization in which outcomes emerge which are highly dependent on the relationships and context rather than merely the parts. Stuart Kauffman calls this "order for free" and Kevin Kelly refers to it as "creating something out of nothing."

Tales
Learn as you go


Bibliography
Kauffman:
At Home

Kelly:
Out of Control


Tales
What we could be doing
Emerges from the fabric


"I found a lot of what we did [in management] was really dumb. It was very impersonal. We treated people as if they were on-dimensional. If you figure them out, give them strict rules, put money in front of them, they will perform better...it was very linear."
James Taylor
President and CEO
University of Louisville Hospital
Louisville, Kentucky


Complexity science is not a single theory. It is the study of complex adaptive systems - the patterns of relationships within them, how they are sustained, how they self-organize and how outcomes emerge. Within the science there are many theories and concepts. The science encompasses more than one theoretical framework. Complexity science is highly interdisciplinary including biologists, anthropologists, economists, sociologists, management theorists and many others in a quest to answer some fundamental questions about living, adaptable, changeable systems.

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All Components of Edgeware Primer Copyright © 2000, Brenda J. Zimmerman.
Schulich School of Business, York University, Toronto, Canada.
Permission to copy for educational purposes only. All other rights reserved.