The Magic Ring Systems Thinking Approach to Control Systems

Technical or mathematical tools are not necessary to construct Control Systems; instead the book adopts a highly simple and universal logic behind the notion itself of control process and the simple and universal action of the Control Systems that produce this process. The Magic Ring: Systems Thinki...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mella, Piero
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Cham Springer International Publishing 2014, 2014
Edition:1st ed. 2014
Series:Contemporary Systems Thinking
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer eBooks 2005- - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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245 0 0 |a The Magic Ring  |h Elektronische Ressource  |b Systems Thinking Approach to Control Systems  |c by Piero Mella 
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260 |a Cham  |b Springer International Publishing  |c 2014, 2014 
300 |a XXVII, 597 p. 239 illus., 187 illus. in color  |b online resource 
505 0 |a The Language of Systems Thinking for Control Systems -- The Ring: The General Structure of Control Systems -- The Rign Variety: A Basic Typology -- The Ring Completed: Multi-lever and Multi-objective Control Systems -- The Ring: Observation and Design -- The Magic Ring in Action: Individuals -- The Magic Ring in Action: Life Environments -- The Magic Ring in Action: Organizations -- The Magic Ring Explores Cognition and Learning -- Concluding Remarks: Toward a General Discipline of Control 
653 |a Business 
653 |a Management science 
653 |a Applied Dynamical Systems 
653 |a Algorithms 
653 |a Business and Management 
653 |a Control theory 
653 |a Systems Theory, Control 
653 |a System theory 
653 |a Nonlinear theories 
653 |a Dynamics 
041 0 7 |a eng  |2 ISO 639-2 
989 |b Springer  |a Springer eBooks 2005- 
490 0 |a Contemporary Systems Thinking 
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520 |a Technical or mathematical tools are not necessary to construct Control Systems; instead the book adopts a highly simple and universal logic behind the notion itself of control process and the simple and universal action of the Control Systems that produce this process. The Magic Ring: Systems Thinking Approach to Control Systems is divided into 10 chapters. Chapter 1 seeks to review the basic language of Systems Thinking and the models it allows us to create, while Chapter 2 introduces the control process, presenting the theoretical structure of four simple Control Systems we all can observe and manage. In Chapter 3 a general typology of Control Systems is proposed with examples taken from observations of reality. The view of Control Systems is broadened in Chapter 4 by introducing two important generalizations: 1. multilever Control Systems, with levers that are independent or dependent of each other; 2. multi-objective systems, with independent or interdependent objectives.  
520 |a This book presents a gradual path toward “educating” readers in understanding how Control Systems truly operate and in recognizing, simulating and improving them in all fields of activity. Starting from the hypothesis that knowledge of Control Systems is not only a technical fact but also represents a discipline – that is, “A discipline is a developmental path for acquiring certain skills or competencies. (…) To practice a discipline is to be a lifelong learner. You “never arrive”; you spend your life mastering disciplines.” (Senge, 2006, p. 10) – Piero Mella has set the objective of making Control Systems a topic that is, in a certain sense, simple and attractive by turning to the effective symbolism typical of Systems Thinking models and avoiding too technical and formal a treatment of the subject. Thus readers should know that this is not an engineering, physics, biology or economics text, nor a mathematics one either.  
520 |a Chapter 5 outlines the guidelines for recognizing, observing or designing Control Systems and presents the problems that arise regarding their logical realization, introducing the fundamental distinction between symptomatic and structural control. Chapters 6-9 undertake a “mental journey” through various “environments”, increasingly broader in scope, suggesting to the reader how to recognize therein Control Systems that, by their ubiquitous presence, make the world possible in all its manifestations. Finally Chapter 10 covers ideas about a Discipline of Control Systems and the human aspects of control