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"The whole is more that the
sum of its parts" is simply that constitutive characteristics are not
explanable from the characteristics of the isolated parts. "
L. v. Bertalanffy
"It is necessary to
continue trying to ascend the mountain of ultimate unity, no matter whether
each time it ends in another failure because it can be claimed that there is
a triumph in the trying.
This is one of the features of the human species."
L. v. Bertalanffy
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Ludwig von Bertalanffy was born in a little
village near Vienna on September 19, 1901. In 1918 he started his studies
with history of art and philosophy, firstly at the University of Innsbruck
and then at the University of Vienna where he became a pupil of the
philosophers Robert Reininger and Moritz Schlick, one of the founders of the
Viennese Circle. He finished his PhD with a thesis on the German physicist
and philosopher Gustav Theodor Fechner in 1926, and published his first book
on theoretical biology two years later (Modern Theories of Development).
He was one of the most important
theoretical biologists of the first half of this century; researched on
comparative physiology, on biophysics, on cancer, on psychology, on
philosophy of science. Developed a kinetic theory of stationary open systems
and the General System Theory, was one of the founding fathers and
vice-president of the Society for General System Theory, and one of
the first who applied the system methodology to psychology and the social
sciences.
He published over 200 articles on theoretical
biology and General System Theory in journals, among others in Roux' Archiv
für Entwicklungsmechanik, Nature, Science, American Naturalist, Quarterly
Review of Biology, Philosophy of Science, in books and encyclopedies, wrote
over 10 monographies, edited the Handbuch der Biologie , and was translated
into English, French, Spanish, Swedish, Japanese, Dutch.
Su obra:
La teoría de sistemas
It
was the right time in the 1920s but it still required a large amount of
courage and even a lot more of creativity for building the "Theoretische
Biologie" which became later the "organismic biology"
or "the system theory of the organism": a significant
contribution towards the scientific development of biology, based on the
need of discovering and understanding the laws that govern the biological
organization. It was the very first step towards the General System Theory
that Bertalanffy conceived as a culmination of his general systems insights
into biological, behavioral, social and epistemological domains, while
fighting specifically against the reductionist approaches and the mechanist
interpretations that dehumanize human beings through robotomorphism,
zoomorphism, scientism and other narrow-minded and shortsighted assumptions
that have been used extensively by people without realizing that it is
impossible and improper to simplify the complexity inherent to whatever
human concern. Anyhow the organismic biology still has a long way to go
because the biology establishment continue assigning grants and other
rewards oriented toward the mechanistic approach, while many biological
experimentalists cannot even conceive of approaching biological questions in
other way than the reductionist one, as they are under the fascinating
influence of the technological tools that obstruct them to see life
biologically.
Cybernetics and Systems Science (also: "(General) Systems
Theory" or "Systems Research") constitute a somewhat fuzzily
defined academic domain,
that touches virtually all traditional disciplines, from mathematics,
technology and biology to philosophy and the social sciences. It is more
specifically related to the
recently developing "sciences of complexity", including AI,
neural networks, dynamical systems, chaos, and complex adaptive systems.
Systems theory or
systems science argues that however complex or diverse the world that we
experience, we will always find different types of organization in it, and
such organization can be described by concepts
and principles which are independent from the specific domain at which we
are looking. Hence, if we would uncover those general laws, we would be able
to analyse and solve problems in any domain, pertaining to any type of
system. The systems approach
distinguishes itself from the more traditional analytic
approach by emphasizing the interactions and connecteness of the
different components of a system. Although the systems approach in principle
considers all types of systems, it in practices focuses on the more complex,
adaptive, self-regulating systems which we might call "cybernetic".
http://www.bertalanffy.org/
(Página
sobre el centenario de su nacimiento, obras, reflexiones, )
http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/CSTHINK.html
(Lista de otros teóricos -incluyendo von Bertalanffy- con links e
información sobre la teoría de sistemas).
http://www.psy.pdx.edu/PsiCafe/KeyTheorists/vonBertalanffy.htm
(Aplicación a casos prácticos de algunos de sus conceptos)
http://www.sustainablefutures.net/
(Página sobre futuros sostenibles una aplicación del concepto de
sistemas complejos)
http://www.sustainablefutures.net/resilience/systems/
(Breve explicación de la teoría de sistemas)
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