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Whole Systems Glossary

Last update: 8 February 95

This list is being constructed. If you have good definitions that are pertinent to whole
systems, please send them to ffunch@netcom.com

ABSTRACTION:
a generalized, condensed, or simplified concept derived from a more complex
situation. A part representation of some whole.
BIOSPHERE:
1. the zone of the earth, extending from its crust out into the surrounding
atmosphere, which contains living organisms. 2. all the living organisms of the
earth.
CIVILIZATION:
An economic engine built on ideas.
COMPLEMENTARITY:
Necessary co-existence, inseparable pairs. The universe is inherently
complementary, such as in concave-convex, positive-negative, male-female.
"Unity is inherently plural". (Buckminster Fuller)
COMPLEXITY:
We can say there are two kinds of complexity. Detail Complexity is when there
are many variables. Dynamic Complexity is situations where cause and effect are
subtle, and where the effects over time of interventions are not obvious.
COMPREHENSIVE:
1. dealing with all or many of the relevant details; including much; inclusive. 2.
able to comprehend fully.
CYBERNETICS:
deriving from the Greek word for steersman (kybernetes), was first introduced by
the mathematician Wiener, as the science of communication and control in the
animal and the machine (to which we now might add: in society and in individual
human beings). It grew out of Shannon's information theory, which was designed
to optimize the transfer of information through communication channels (e.g.
telephone lines), and the feedback concept used in engineering control systems.
(Principia Cybernetica)
DESIGN:
Deliberate ordering of components.
DESIGN SCIENCE:
A rigorous, systematic study of the deliberate ordering of components in our
Universe.
DYMAXION:
A trademark word coined by Buckminster Fuller and used about various of his
inventions, meaning essentially "doing more with less".
ECOLOGY:
the study of the relations between living organisms and their environment.
ECONOMICS:
the science that deals with the production, distribution, and consumption of
wealth, and with the various related problems of labor, finance, taxation, etc.
(Webster's New World)
ECONOMY:
a system of producing, distributing, and consuming wealth. (Webster's New
World)
ELEMENTALISM:
Dividing verbally what cannot be divided nonverbally. For example, speaking of
body and mind, or emotions and intellect, as separate and distinct entities.
ENTITY:
[L. prp. of esse, to be] 1. a) being; existence b) the essence of something apart
from its accidental properties. 2. a thing that has definite, individual existence in
reality or in the mind; anything real in itself. (Webster's New World Dictionary)
ENTROPY:
A tendency towards disorder within a closed system, as potential energy gets
"spent".

"The physical Universe's macrocosmic proclivities of becoming locally ever more


dissynchronous, asymmetric, diffuse, and multiplyingly expansive". (Buckminster
Fuller)

ETHICS:
FEEDBACK:
"Any reciprocal flow of influence. In systems thinking it is an axiom that every
influence is both cause and effect. Nothing is ever influenced in just one
direction." (Fifth Discipline)
GENERAL SEMANTICS:
The study of the relationships among language, thought, and behavior. A subject
founded by Alfred Korzybsky in the 1930s.
GEODESIC:
HOLARCHY:
a hierarchically organized, self-regulating, open system of 'holons'. A system of
parts forming a dynamic whole. Coined by Arthur Koestler. Bigger wholes are
divided into smaller parts that are again wholes to the parts below them. For
example, you can divide organisms into organs into tissues into cells into
molecules.
HOLON:
a whole that is also a part. Coined by Arthur Koestler from the Greek 'holos'
meaning whole, and 'on' meaning entity, as in proton or neutron; hence a holon is
a whole to those parts beneath it in a hierarchy but a part to those wholes above it.
HOLONOMIC:
a term descriptive of holistic knowing, i.e. knowing that is simultaneously
intuitive and rational, scientific and artistic. Thus, holonomics describes the order
of reality as well as the way we come to know and express that order. (Jose
Arguelles)
HOLONOMICS:
the study or investigation of laws and principles of whole systems. A unifying
science accounting for not only the interrelationships between fields in the
phenomenal world, but for the interaction of man with this world - man with all of
his cumulative history, thought, and forms of expression inseparable from the
planet upon which he finds himself. (Jose Arguelles)
HOLONOMY:
derived from holo-, "whole", and "-nomy", "law or principle governing or
pertaining to", holonomy refers to the law or principle governing whole systems,
while holonomics describes the study or investigation of this law or principle. As
a descriptive term, holonomy ultimately refers to the universe entire as a dynamic
interwoven web, transcending partial or analytical definition. (Jose Arguelles)
INFINITY-VALUED LOGIC:
Thinking and evaluating situations and issues in terms of degrees and
probabilities. In any situation there are multiple factors of concern and multiple
perspectives. Infinity-valued logic would involve ascertaining degree or
probabilities of usefulness of different parts as related to the desired objective and
adding them up into an overall evaluation. (general semantics)
MULTI-ORDINALITY:
In general semantics, a condition whereby a term may exist on different levels of
abstraction, for example, in "hate of hate" and "hate of a person", "hate" is used at
different levels of abstraction.
NETWORK:
NETWORKING:
NON-ARISTOTELIAN:
Characteristic of systems that avoid identifications, that see parts in relation to
wholes, and that deal with gradual scales of probabilities rather than with fixed
categorizations. (general semantics)
NON-ELEMENTALISTIC:
Avoiding sharp divisions between what different things ARE. Addressing the
whole, rather than artificial parts. Not dividing verbally what cannot be divided
nonverbally. (general semantics)
ONE-VALUED LOGIC:
Taking all data without question, like as the word of God, to be accepted without
evaluation.
PARADIGM:
"A paradigm is a set of rules and regulations (written or unwritten) that does two
things: 1) it establishes or defines boundaries; and 2) it tells you how to behave
inside the boundaries in order to be successful". (Joel Arthur Barker)

"A shared set of assumptions. The paradigm is the way we perceive the world;
water to the fish. The paradigm explains the world to us and helps us to predict its
behavior. When we are in the middle of the paradigm, it is hard to imagine any
other paradigm" (Adam Smith).
"A paradigm is a framework of thought ... a scheme for understanding and
explaining certain aspects of reality". (Marilyn Ferguson) From the Greek
paradeigma, which means 'model, pattern, example".

PRECESSION:
Refers to two geometical systems which, oriented perpendicularly to each other,
reveal a new system or geometric relationship.
QUALITY:
REQUISITE VARIETY:
In any system, the part that has the greatest range of freedom controls the system.
SEMANTIC REACTION:
A response based on the consciously or mostly the sub-consciously perceived
meaning of an event, rather than based on the event itself.
STRUCTURE:
A self-stabilizing energy-event complex. (Fuller)
SYNERGETICS:
SYNERGY:
"behavior of whole systems unpredicted by the separately observed behaviors of
any of the system's separate parts or any subassembly of the system's parts."
(Buckminster Fuller)
SYNTROPY:
A tendency towards order and symmetrical combinations, designs of ever more
advantageous and orderly patterns. Evolutionary cooperation. Anti-entropy. (ref:
Buckminster Fuller)
SYSTEM:
An organized collection of interrelated elements that performs one or more
functions. (The Communication Handbook)

"A system divides all of the Universe into a) all of the Universe outside the
system, b) all of the universe inside the system, and c) the little bit of remaining
Universe which comprises the system that separates the macrocosm from the
microcosm". (Buckminster Fuller)

SYSTEMIC STRUCTURE:
"The key interrelationships that influence behavior over time. These are not
interrelationships between people, but among key variables, such as population,
natural resources, and food production in a developing country; or engineers'
product ideas and technical and managerial know-how in a high-tech company."
(Fifth Discipline)
SYSTEMS THEORY:
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 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 analyze and solve problems in any domain,
pertaining to any type of system. (Principia Cybernetica)
TEAM:
THREE-VALUED LOGIC:
An expansion of two-valued logic. Everything is either Right, Wrong, or
Undecided. Either Yes, No, or Maybe. Signifies a lack of ability to ascertain
degrees and probabilities.
TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT:
TWO-VALUED LOGIC:
Black and white, polarized thinking. Evaluating events or issues in terms of two
values, being right or wrong, good or bad. No degrees, no varying probabilities,
no different viewpoints, simply Yes or No.
UNIVERSE:
"An omni-interaccommodative, nonsimultaneous, and only partially overlapping,
omni-intertransforming, self-regenerating scenario." (Buckminster Fuller) The
aggregate of all experience. The role of the observers, or humanity, is an essential
component of the definition, for awareness is a prerequisite to defining and
understanding. Experience consists of dynamic, regenerative patterns of energy.
(paraphrased from Fuller)
VALUES:
VECTOR:
Represents an energy event, consists of magnitude and direction, represented on
paper by an arrow with specific length and angular orientation. Vectors also
represent relationships between energy events.
WEALTH:
Organized capacity of society to apply generalized principles toward present and
future life support. (Buckminster Fuller)
WHOLE:

http://www.worldtrans.org/whole/wholedefs.html

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