ketan agrawal

Thinking in Systems: A Primer
Last modified on July 18, 2022

Overall thoughts

It’s crazy how pervasive systems are in our universe, once you learn how to look for them. It’s like they’ve hiding in plain sight, but I just didn’t have the proper frames to see them.

This book inspires me to want to get more intuitions for the ways that complex systems work. (I mean, tbh, every person on this earth probably has intuition for a complex system, in one way or another. We come into contact with incredibly complex social, economic, psychological, and physical systems every day, and we have really good mental models of a lot of it. We can predict the future.) But I guess…I want to go beyond the everyday intuitions that we have for systems that we know. I want to have intuitions for broad categories of systems, for the way that the world works.

Are viruses complex systems? On its own, it seems that an individual virus is not very complex – it’s not super resilient, and it doesn’t have an apparent hierarchy. but maybe it self-organizes, in that it reproduces…and maybe if we see the evolution of viruses as a system, then that can be said to have more system-like properties…e.g. it’s resilient.

The idea that resiliency != stasis really stuck with me.

Highlights/annotations

Introduction: The Systems Lens

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Managers are not confronted with problems that are independent of each other , but with dynamic situations that consist of complex systems of changing problems that interact with each other . I call such situations messes . … Managers do not solve problems , they manage messes .

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So , what is a system ? A system is a set of things — people , cells , molecules , or whatever — interconnected in such a way that they produce their own pattern of behavior over time . The system may be buffeted , constricted , triggered , or driven by outside forces . But the system’s response to these forces is characteristic of itself , and that response is seldom simple in the real world .

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Modern systems theory , bound up with computers and equations , hides the fact that it traffics in truths known at some level by everyone . It is often possible , therefore , to make a direct translation from systems jargon to traditional wisdom .

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Hunger , poverty , environmental degradation , economic instability , unemployment , chronic disease , drug addiction , and war ,

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are intrinsically systems problems — undesirable behaviors characteristic of the system structures that produce them . They will yield only as we reclaim our intuition , stop casting blame , see the system as the source of its own problems , and find the courage and wisdom to restructure it .

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I don’t think the systems way of seeing is better than the reductionist way of thinking . I think it’s complementary , and therefore revealing . You can see some things through the lens of the human eye , other things through the lens of a microscope , others through the lens of a telescope , and still others through the lens of systems theory . Everything seen through each kind of lens is actually there . Each way of seeing allows our knowledge of the wondrous world in which we live to become a little more complete .

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a simple lesson but one that we often ignore : The behavior of a system cannot be known just by knowing the elements of which the system is made .

Part One: System Structure and Behavior

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A system * is an interconnected set of elements that is coherently organized in a way that achieves something . If you look at that definition closely for a minute , you can see that a system must consist of three kinds of things : elements , interconnections , and a function or purpose .

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Some people say that an old city neighborhood where people know each other and communicate regularly is a social system , and that a new apartment block full of strangers is not — not until new relationships arise and a system forms .

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    +1 for living in an intentional community

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It’s easier to learn about a system’s elements than about its interconnections .

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Information holds systems together and plays a great role in determining how they operate .

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If information - based relationships are hard to see , functions or purposes are even harder . A system’s function or purpose is not necessarily spoken , written , or expressed explicitly , except through the operation of the system . The best way to deduce the system’s purpose is to watch for a while to see how the system behaves .

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    system’s purpose is what it does

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An important function of almost every system is to ensure its own perpetuation .

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Keeping sub - purposes and overall system purposes in harmony is an essential function of successful systems .

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Changing elements usually has the least effect on the system .

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If the interconnections change , the system may be greatly altered .

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Changes in function or purpose also can be drastic

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A stock is the foundation of any system . Stocks are the elements of the system that you can see , feel , count , or measure at any given time .

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Stocks change over time through the actions of a flow . Flows are filling and draining , births and deaths , purchases and sales , growth and decay , deposits and withdrawals , successes and failures .

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A stock can be increased by decreasing its outflow rate as well as by increasing its inflow rate .

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A stock takes time to change , because flows take time to flow . That’s a vital point , a key to understanding why systems behave as they do . Stocks usually change slowly .

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Changes in stocks set the pace of the dynamics of systems .

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    Interesting that this rhymes with Beer talking about stable vs. unstable systems – will the wave crash too fast before it can be managed / homeostasis-ed?

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Stocks allow inflows and outflows to be decoupled and to be independent and temporarily out of balance with each other .

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Systems thinkers see the world as a collection of stocks along with the mechanisms for regulating the levels in the stocks by manipulating flows . That means system thinkers see the world as a collection of “ feedback processes . ”