| Preface | p. ix |
| Foreword | p. xv |
| The Background to Systemics | p. 1 |
| Introduction | p. 1 |
| What is Systemics? | p. 3 |
| A short, introductory history | p. 5 |
| Fundamental theoretical concepts | p. 15 |
| Set theory | p. 16 |
| Set theory and systems | p. 18 |
| Formalizing systems | p. 22 |
| Formalizing systemics | p. 25 |
| Sets, structured sets, systems and subsystems | p. 38 |
| Other approaches | p. 41 |
| Generalizing Systemics and the Role of the Observer | p. 47 |
| The contribution of Von Foerster | p. 48 |
| The role of Observer in scientific theories | p. 50 |
| Uncertainty principles in Science | p. 55 |
| The Dynamic Usage of Models (DYSAM) | p. 64 |
| Background to DYSAM | p. 64 |
| Implementing DYSAM | p. 70 |
| A model of DYSAM | p. 75 |
| Emergence | p. 89 |
| A short history of the concept | p. 89 |
| Collective Beings | p. 97 |
| Aggregations, Congregations | p. 97 |
| Collective behavior: an introduction | p. 98 |
| Cognitive system and cognitive models | p. 102 |
| Collective behavior | p. 104 |
| Collective Beings | p. 110 |
| Components contemporarily belonging to many systems | p. 113 |
| Modelling issues of Collective Beings | p. 116 |
| Modelling Collective Beings | p. 123 |
| Kinds of collective behaviors and Collective Beings | p. 128 |
| Affecting the behavior of Collective Beings | p. 132 |
| Further remarks | p. 134 |
| How to model emergence: traditional methods | p. 145 |
| A general classification of models of emergence | p. 145 |
| Dynamical Systems Theory for modelling emergence: the basic concepts | p. 149 |
| Dynamical Systems Theory for modelling emergence: bifurcation phenomena | p. 160 |
| Emergence phenomena in spatio-temporal systems and Dissipative Structures | p. 171 |
| The intrinsic limitations of traditional methods | p. 188 |
| How to model emergence: non-traditional methods | p. 195 |
| Synergetics | p. 195 |
| The theory of phase transitions | p. 201 |
| Landau theory | p. 212 |
| Ginzburg-Landau theory | p. 217 |
| Scaling hypothesis and Renormalization Group | p. 223 |
| Microscopic models | p. 226 |
| The intrinsic limitations of the theory of phase transitions | p. 229 |
| Quantum Field Theory | p. 230 |
| Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking | p. 239 |
| Non-ideal models of emergence | p. 249 |
| Neural networks | p. 250 |
| Cellular Automata | p. 261 |
| Artificial Life | p. 265 |
| The role of noise | p. 273 |
| The relationships between traditional and non-traditional models | p. 279 |
| The Role of Ergodicity | p. 291 |
| Some definitions related to ergodicity | p. 293 |
| Ergodic | p. 293 |
| Disciplinary definitions | p. 293 |
| Ergodicity and stationarity | p. 300 |
| Ergodicity in Collective Beings | p. 302 |
| Emergence, Collective Beings, and Ergodicity | p. 306 |
| Further considerations | p. 309 |
| Some remarks and possible lines of research | p. 313 |
| Applications to Social Systems (1): growth, development, sustainable development and ethics | p. 321 |
| Growth, Development and Sustainable Development | p. 323 |
| Representing Growth | p. 324 |
| Development | p. 326 |
| Managing for development | p. 334 |
| Ethics | p. 336 |
| Ethics and Quality | p. 340 |
| Effectiveness and advantages of Ethics | p. 342 |
| Ethics for quality and effectiveness | p. 343 |
| Ethics and Globalization | p. 346 |
| Applications to Social Systems (2): systems archetypes, virtual systems, knowledge management, organizational learning, industrial districts | p. 353 |
| Systems archetypes and collective beings | p. 353 |
| Virtual systems | p. 359 |
| Being Virtual: Philosophy, Physics, Computer Science and Economics | p. 362 |
| The Opposite Process: Making Virtual the Current Reality | p. 363 |
| Virtual Corporations | p. 365 |
| Money | p. 369 |
| Other applications | p. 371 |
| Knowledge management | p. 371 |
| Organizational learning | p. 375 |
| Industrial districts | p. 379 |
| Applications to Cognitive Systems: Beyond Computationalism | p. 387 |
| Traditional Cognitive Science | p. 387 |
| Is Cognition equivalent to Computation? | p. 394 |
| Theories of Consciousness | p. 397 |
| Embodied Cognition | p. 400 |
| Some systemic properties | p. 407 |
| Some questions and answers about Systemics | p. 441 |
| Index | p. 459 |
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