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Posted by u/christudor 3 years ago
Ask HN: Best Books on Systems Theory?
I'm halfway through John Gall's Systemantics and have been really enjoying it.

What might I move on to next?

I think I'm more interested in the real-world applications of systems theory (e.g. how we might go about fixing a massively complicated system like the NHS) than anything purely mathematical, though understand there's probably quite a lot of overlap here.

Thanks!

AkshatM · 3 years ago
Nancy Leveson's _Engineering a Safer World_ (available for free here: https://direct.mit.edu/books/book/2908/Engineering-a-Safer-W...) is required reading, in my opinion. It talks about applying systems theory to reducing industrial accidents, using various case studies such as the Bhopal gas tragedy, which maps automatically to reducing outage severity and incident severity for tech workers.

The key insight it applies is that root-cause analysis to fix and improve situations is limited because choice of root-cause is somewhat arbitrary - it really depends on where you stop probing further. Engineers should not rely on root-cause analysis to identify failures in _the system_, only on failures of components. Nancy proposes alternative techniques instead to identify and improve broken systems.

The detail, quality and depth of her treatment makes it immediately practical and useful. My one complaint is that it is a bit long, and not all of it is easily condensed into short treatments - but I guess verbosity is the tradeoff for quality?

easytiger · 3 years ago
> how we might go about fixing a massively complicated system like the NHS

You wont find a book to help with that because the real answers are not politically correct. Also because no one is willing to confront reality. It is inherently, politically unsolvable. You could sidestep reality and look for a solution that doesn't hurt peoples feelings, but the NHS is a cult as much as it is a healthcare provider.

What you are asking is, "How could we go to this Catholic Church and solve their Jesus problem". You can't do it without a paradigm altering schism.

I'd love to have a real discussion about this but no one is willing to emote even what the problems they perceive are and the bias they apply to define the root of said problems.

splatzone · 3 years ago
Could you elaborate a little about these solutions to the NHS’s problems which are politically incorrect? Not trying to trap you here, I’m genuinely curious
ethanbond · 3 years ago
Thinking in Systems by Donella Meadows is great
Jtsummers · 3 years ago
And for people who don't want to read the entire book (which is good and not terribly long, probably an easy weekend read for most here) this article covers her primary thesis about how to actually change real systems:

https://donellameadows.org/archives/leverage-points-places-t...

mazeway · 3 years ago
Feedback Control for Computer Systems: Introducing Control Theory to Enterprise Programmers

May be something you want.

bwh2 · 3 years ago
Drift Into Failure is a good read about how systems fail, albeit a little light on solutions.
f0e4c2f7 · 3 years ago
I enjoyed Thinking in Systems: A Primer by Donella Meadows