{"title":"回应:“永远不是最强的:在关于质量的辩论中调和系统动力学的四个思想流派。”——系统动力学家对抗问题,而不是对抗其他系统动力学家!","authors":"William Schoenberg","doi":"10.1002/sdr.1750","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The recent article published in this journal by Clancy et al. (2023) presents a very troubling view of the System Dynamics community as a group of warring successor states led by powerful generals, instead of the largely unified and community-led field that it is. I believe that it is wrong to amplify or encourage (even if inadvertently) the formation of “political parties” within the field based largely on an appeal to the authority of specific individuals. Individuals who express their opinions and make calls to action derived from their unique experiences do so as part of a process that is necessary to nourish the underlying democratic nature of the field. To me, the field of System Dynamics is a living community of individuals, guided by the experiences of each other and who are seeking understanding through the great lens of what I refer to as feedback-oriented thinking. Within this community, ideas and practice thrive or die based on their usefulness to those who call themselves System Dynamicists. It is the community, along with the people who use and act upon the work products of the individuals within the community, that determines what the bar for quality truly is. Through this lens, the debate about quality, or what I would prefer to call the evolution of the standards for fitness for purpose, is one where individuals express their views and perspectives on what has either made them successful, or in the case of failure, what would have made them successful or has led them to failure. Ideas on quality are not conceived in a vacuum, but instead are forged through the hard-earned experiences of individuals within the community. For the sake of this community, I appeal to this journal to please not enable the development of political parties or gate-keeping in System Dynamics. Instead, the journal should function as the mechanism through which System Dynamicists share what has made their work succeed or fail, and through that exercise let those authors help the rest of us be successful in our future work. To my fellow System Dynamicists, I believe that quality within our field does not fall neatly into any of the categories presented by Clancy et al. (2023): quality in the general sense, as hard as it is to define at that level of abstraction, crosses the boundaries drawn in the article. I believe that if, as a field, we want to find growth and future relevance, then we are going to have to embrace the living and therefore evolving nature of the community that we are all so lucky to have a small place within. We need to cultivate a System Dynamics community of critical thinkers who can take the advice and experiences gifted to them by any of their fellow community members and turn it into actions and work products that create successes, and sometimes failures, that as a group we can use to form and shape future practice. Therefore, to all my fellow System Dynamicists, I ask that you reframe this debate on quality as System Dynamicists versus problems, not versus fellow System Dynamicists. William (Billy) Schoenberg is a lead software engineer at isee Systems inc. and a Researcher at the University of Bergen. He holds a PhD in System Dynamics from the University of Bergen. He is a key member of the team that designs and develops Stella Architect and the isee Exchange. 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It is the community, along with the people who use and act upon the work products of the individuals within the community, that determines what the bar for quality truly is. Through this lens, the debate about quality, or what I would prefer to call the evolution of the standards for fitness for purpose, is one where individuals express their views and perspectives on what has either made them successful, or in the case of failure, what would have made them successful or has led them to failure. Ideas on quality are not conceived in a vacuum, but instead are forged through the hard-earned experiences of individuals within the community. For the sake of this community, I appeal to this journal to please not enable the development of political parties or gate-keeping in System Dynamics. Instead, the journal should function as the mechanism through which System Dynamicists share what has made their work succeed or fail, and through that exercise let those authors help the rest of us be successful in our future work. To my fellow System Dynamicists, I believe that quality within our field does not fall neatly into any of the categories presented by Clancy et al. (2023): quality in the general sense, as hard as it is to define at that level of abstraction, crosses the boundaries drawn in the article. I believe that if, as a field, we want to find growth and future relevance, then we are going to have to embrace the living and therefore evolving nature of the community that we are all so lucky to have a small place within. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
Clancy等人(2023)最近在本杂志上发表的一篇文章提出了一个非常令人不安的观点,即系统动力学社区是由强大的将军领导的一群交战的继承国,而不是基本上统一和社区领导的领域。我认为,扩大或鼓励(即使是无意中)在主要基于对特定个人权威的呼吁的领域内形成“政党”是错误的。个人根据其独特的经验表达自己的意见并呼吁采取行动,这是培养该领域基本民主性质所必需的进程的一部分。对我来说,系统动力学领域是一个活生生的个人社区,以彼此的经验为指导,通过我所说的反馈导向思维的伟大镜头寻求理解。在这个社区中,思想和实践的兴盛与否取决于它们对那些自称为系统动力学家的人的有用性。是社区,以及使用和操作社区中个人的工作产品的人,决定了质量的真正标准是什么。从这个角度来看,关于质量的争论,或者我更愿意称之为目标适应标准的演变,是一个个人表达他们的观点和观点的地方,关于什么使他们成功,或者在失败的情况下,什么使他们成功或导致他们失败。关于质量的想法不是凭空设想出来的,而是通过社区中个人辛苦获得的经验而形成的。为了这个社区的利益,我呼吁本刊不要在《系统动力学》中发展政党或守门。相反,期刊应该作为一种机制,通过它,系统动力学家分享他们的工作成功或失败的原因,并通过这种练习,让这些作者帮助我们其他人在未来的工作中取得成功。对于我的系统动力学同事,我相信我们领域的质量并不完全属于Clancy等人(2023)所提出的任何类别:一般意义上的质量,尽管在抽象层次上很难定义,但它跨越了文章中划定的边界。我相信,作为一个领域,如果我们想要找到增长和未来的相关性,那么我们就必须拥抱社区的生活,因此我们都很幸运地拥有一个小地方。我们需要培养一个由批判性思考者组成的系统动力学社区,他们可以接受任何社区成员给予他们的建议和经验,并将其转化为创造成功(有时是失败)的行动和工作产品,作为一个团队,我们可以使用它来形成和塑造未来的实践。因此,对于我所有的系统动力学家同仁,我请求你们将这场关于质量的辩论重新定义为系统动力学家与问题之争,而不是系统动力学家与问题之争。William (Billy) Schoenberg是isee Systems inc.的首席软件工程师,也是卑尔根大学的研究员。他拥有卑尔根大学系统动力学博士学位。他是设计和开发Stella Architect和isee Exchange团队的关键成员。他一直着迷于结构和行为之间的关系,并对传达这种关系的本质特别感兴趣。
In response to: “Never the strongest: reconciling the four schools of thought in system dynamics in the debate on quality.” — System Dynamicists versus problems, not versus fellow System Dynamicists!
The recent article published in this journal by Clancy et al. (2023) presents a very troubling view of the System Dynamics community as a group of warring successor states led by powerful generals, instead of the largely unified and community-led field that it is. I believe that it is wrong to amplify or encourage (even if inadvertently) the formation of “political parties” within the field based largely on an appeal to the authority of specific individuals. Individuals who express their opinions and make calls to action derived from their unique experiences do so as part of a process that is necessary to nourish the underlying democratic nature of the field. To me, the field of System Dynamics is a living community of individuals, guided by the experiences of each other and who are seeking understanding through the great lens of what I refer to as feedback-oriented thinking. Within this community, ideas and practice thrive or die based on their usefulness to those who call themselves System Dynamicists. It is the community, along with the people who use and act upon the work products of the individuals within the community, that determines what the bar for quality truly is. Through this lens, the debate about quality, or what I would prefer to call the evolution of the standards for fitness for purpose, is one where individuals express their views and perspectives on what has either made them successful, or in the case of failure, what would have made them successful or has led them to failure. Ideas on quality are not conceived in a vacuum, but instead are forged through the hard-earned experiences of individuals within the community. For the sake of this community, I appeal to this journal to please not enable the development of political parties or gate-keeping in System Dynamics. Instead, the journal should function as the mechanism through which System Dynamicists share what has made their work succeed or fail, and through that exercise let those authors help the rest of us be successful in our future work. To my fellow System Dynamicists, I believe that quality within our field does not fall neatly into any of the categories presented by Clancy et al. (2023): quality in the general sense, as hard as it is to define at that level of abstraction, crosses the boundaries drawn in the article. I believe that if, as a field, we want to find growth and future relevance, then we are going to have to embrace the living and therefore evolving nature of the community that we are all so lucky to have a small place within. We need to cultivate a System Dynamics community of critical thinkers who can take the advice and experiences gifted to them by any of their fellow community members and turn it into actions and work products that create successes, and sometimes failures, that as a group we can use to form and shape future practice. Therefore, to all my fellow System Dynamicists, I ask that you reframe this debate on quality as System Dynamicists versus problems, not versus fellow System Dynamicists. William (Billy) Schoenberg is a lead software engineer at isee Systems inc. and a Researcher at the University of Bergen. He holds a PhD in System Dynamics from the University of Bergen. He is a key member of the team that designs and develops Stella Architect and the isee Exchange. He has always been fascinated by the relationship between structure and behavior and is especially interested in communicating the nature of that relationship.
期刊介绍:
The System Dynamics Review exists to communicate to a wide audience advances in the application of the perspectives and methods of system dynamics to societal, technical, managerial, and environmental problems. The Review publishes: advances in mathematical modelling and computer simulation of dynamic feedback systems; advances in methods of policy analysis based on information feedback and circular causality; generic structures (dynamic feedback systems that support particular widely applicable behavioural insights); system dynamics contributions to theory building in the social and natural sciences; policy studies and debate emphasizing the role of feedback and circular causality in problem behaviour.