82,890
edits
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{a|book review|}}{{br|Thinking in Systems}} by {{author|Donella H. Meadows}} | {{a|book review|}}{{br|Thinking in Systems}} by {{author|Donella H. Meadows}} | ||
{{Quote|A '''stock''' is the foundation of any system. Stocks are the elements in the system that you can see, feel, count, or measure at any given time. A system stock is just what it sounds like: a store, a quantity, an accumulation of material or information that has built up over time. It may be the water in a bathtub, a population, the books in a bookstore, the wood in a tree, the money in the bank, your own self-confidence. A stock does not have to be physical. Your reserve of goodwill for others or your supply of hope that the world can be better are both stocks. | |||
:—{{br|Thinking in Systems}} by {{author|Donella H. Meadows}}.}} | |||
Very much of a piece with {{Author|Charles Perrow}}’s {{Br|Normal Accidents}} Donella Meadows’ introduction to systems theory is a good place to start in breaking down the tyranny of [[Deterministic|determinist]], [[Reductionism|reductive]] views of the world. It is short, clear and to the point. | Very much of a piece with {{Author|Charles Perrow}}’s {{Br|Normal Accidents}} Donella Meadows’ introduction to systems theory is a good place to start in breaking down the tyranny of [[Deterministic|determinist]], [[Reductionism|reductive]] views of the world. It is short, clear and to the point. | ||