Brian Futterman & Scott Renick
SYSTEMS & CHAOS THEORY
Gee whiz, look at that system!
Chaos and Complexity(anything but)
Complex adaptive systems Evolving rules, dynamic environment, interacting agents Ants scale to organizations “Anti-equilibrium”
Chaos vs. stasis – two possible states of a CAS with shifting patterns and group interactions; constantly in flux
“Companies don’t innovate; markets do.” –Dick Foster
…meaning…
Complex adaptive systems behave in CHAOTIC ways.
Beinhocker says:
All are open systems comprising a number of agents whose dynamic interactions self-organize to create a larger structure.
Eric Beinhocker, Strategy at the edge of Chaos, 1997Writing about cities, forest ecosystems, the immune system, and the Internet.
Beinhocker says:
EMERGENCE!
Closed vs. Open Systems
Beinhocker,E.D. (1997) "Strategy at the edge of chaos." The McKinsey Quarterly, 1, p. 27
Punctuated Equilibrium(Complexity with Chaos)
Beinhocker,E.D. (1997) "Strategy at the edge of chaos." The McKinsey Quarterly, 1, p. 32
Shocks to the equilibrium (punctuations) relative to the organizational ‘status-quo’ (stasis)
…this behavior is Chaos
Adoption of ESSPs
Change inproductivity
Perspective
What Chaos does
Bifurcations (divergence) occur when a new equilibrium is established, or punctuated, and an organization is found at the edge of chaos, prompting action.
Strange attractors are possible scenarios/results that lie at the end of a bifurcated sequence of events.
Beinhocker,E.D. (1997) "Strategy at the edge of chaos." The McKinsey Quarterly, 1, p. 35
In other words…
Bifurcations
Aperiodic nature
History repeats itself?Well, it’s complicated.
McBride, 1999:“…chaos refers to what might be called ordered
disorder”
Patterns will emerge and may resemble a trend, but cannot be used for anything beyond mass generalizations.
…behaviour in chaotic systems may be perceived as unpredictable. Periods of inactivity may be punctuated by sudden change, apparent patterns of behaviour may disappear and new patterns unexpectedly emerge. Such behaviour emerges in complex systems. This chaotic behaviour does not indicate a lack of order. Rather, the order is difficult or impossible to describe in simple terms and requires complex narrative description.
McBride, 2008EMPHASIS ADDED
Systems Theory
Systems Theory
Entropy = disorder …double negative…
Negative entropy = increased order
Openness & feedback Feedback can be positive or negative
Chaos describes a system that is predictable in principle but unpredictable in practice. Although the system follows deterministic rules, its time evolution
appears random.
Sources
Beinhocker, E. (2000). Strategy at the Edge of Chaos. McKinsey Quarterly, 1-17.
McBride, N. (n.d.). Chaos Theory and Information Systems (pp. 1-13, Tech.). Leicester, UK.
McBride, N. (2005). Chaos theory as a model for interpreting information systems in organizations (pp. 1-22, Tech.). Leicester, UK.
Wikipedia contributors. "Systems theory." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 18 Jan. 2010. Web. 22 Jan. 2010.
Wikipedia contributors. "Chaos theory." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 21 Jan. 2010. Web. 22 Jan. 2010.
Wikipedia contributors. ”Chaos." Scholarpedia. Scholarpedia, 26 Jan. 2010. Web. 26 Jan. 2010.
Brian Futterman & Scott Renick
SYSTEMS & CHAOS THEORY