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Laszlo,
Ervin The Systems View of the World [abstract
420 words]
Laszlo suggests
we think of matter as patterned knots of energy in space-time
where the smooth flow has been disturbed by electromagnetic forces.
Things emerge from the background of flows like knots
tied on a fishing net.
There are
a vast number of such knots throughout the reaches of space-time.
They are not isolated units but parts of a continuum, and they communicate
with one another through attraction and repulsion.
Some of the
elementary units achieve cohesion in balancing the energy flows
that constitute them and form a pattern. They constitute super-knots
of a much more complex kind. The material universe becomes a vast
system of balanced energies.
The patterns
become complex; there is an emerging hierarchy. For example, electrons
and nucleons are condensations of energies in space-time field
They are capable of integration into balanced structures: atoms...
[that are] capable of forming bonds with neighboring atoms. We thus
get chemical molecules. Electronic bonding permits the formation
of complex polymer molecules and crystals. Under favorable conditions,
the level of organization reaches heavy organic substances, such
as protein molecules and nucleic acids. Now there are the basic
building blocks for self-replicating units of still higher organizational
level: cells. These systems may achieve coordination with others,
and we are on our way toward multicellular phenomena. The organic
systems themselves, define the supraorganic community. Ultimately
we reach the level of the global system.
This systems
within systems view of the world allows us to understand that man
is one species of system in a complex and embracing hierarchy of
nature. Seeing himself as a connecting link in a complex natural
hierarchy cancels mans anthropocentrism, but seeing the hierarchy
itself as an expression of self-ordering and self-creating nature
bolsters his self-esteem and encourages his humanism.
We are concrete
embodiments of cosmic processes. Our knowledge has made us increasingly
autonomous in nature, and enabled us to create the worlds of culture.
It has freed us from many of the bonds of biological existence and
given us license to determine our own evolution. But the possibility
of error is the price we pay for freedom.
Immersed
in the immense hierarchies of the biosphere, we are nevertheless
masters of our destiny, for we have enormous control capabilities.
The supreme challenge of our age is to specify, and learn to respect,
the complex and delicately balanced hierarchic order that is both
in us and around us. A systems philosophy is the only way to make
sure that we achieve a culture that is viable and humanistic.
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