20:
204:
The "whole" in
Tectology, and the laws of its integrity, were derived from biological rather than the physicalistic view of the world. Regarding the three scientific cycles which comprise the basis of Tectology (mathematical, physico-biological, and natural-philosophical), it is from the
150:
could only be understood through their organizational character." Bogdanov considered that any complex should correspond to its environment and adapt to it. A stable and organized complex is greater than the sum of its parts. In
Tectology, the term 'stability' refers not to a
41:
to describe a new universal science that consisted of unifying all social, biological and physical sciences by considering them as systems of relationships and by seeking the organizational principles that underlie all systems. Tektology is now regarded as a precursor of
220:'s "macro-paradigm", which induces synergistic consequences into an adaptive assembling phenomenon (1995). Bogdanov's visionary view of nature was one of an 'organization' with interconnected systems.
116:, by considering Bogdanov's works of fiction as an extension of his general work in Tectology. In this, Wark also considers Tectology as an alternative to the Soviet state philosophy of
97:. His work drew on the ideas of Noiré who in the 1870s also attempted to construct a monistic system using the principle of conservation of energy as one of its structural elements.
575:
About tectology, John A. Mikes, prepared for ICCS [International
Conference on Complex Systems, New England Complex Systems Inst. Sept.21-27,1997 Nashua NH USA)
155:, but to the possibility of preserving the complex in the given environment. A 'complex' is not identical to a 'complicated, a hard-to-comprehend, large
178:
phenomena and systemic development. Tectology as a constructive science built elements into a functional entity using general laws of organization.
293:
545:
Int'l Conf.: Origins of
Organization Theory in Russia and the Soviet Union, University of East Anglia (Norwich), Jan. 8-11, 1995
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419:
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and thus creates the beginning of a general empirical, trans-disciplinary science of physical organization, as an expedient
347:
310:
Originally the term denoted "a branch of morphology that regards an organism as made up of other organisms" (from Greek
564:"Bogdanov and His Work: A Guide to the Published and Unpublished Works of Alexander A. Bogdanov (Malinovsky) 1873-1928"
505:
491:
477:
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Bogdanov and his Work. A guide to the published and unpublished works of
Alexander A. Bogdanov (Malinovsky) 1873-1928
126:
563:
152:
66:, published in Russia between 1912 and 1917, anticipated many of the ideas that were popularized later by
614:
93:, James White (1998) acknowledged the intellectual debt of Bogdanov's work on tectology to the ideas of
311:
82:. There are suggestions that both Wiener and von Bertalanffy might have read the German edition of
604:
117:
181:
According to his "empirio-monistic" principle (1899), he does not recognize differences between
216:. This set of laws also organizes the internal development of the complex units, as implied by
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physico-biological cycle that the central concepts have been taken and universalized.
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In
Tectology, Bogdanov made the first 'modern' attempt to formulate the most general
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423:
383:
619:
609:
163:
138:
According to
Bogdanov "the aim of Tectology is the systematization of organized
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523:
Reading The
Tektology: provisional findings, postulates and research directions
420:"T E C T O L O G Y the natural philosophy of organization in/into complexities"
194:
67:
43:
387:
598:
395:
328:
113:
105:
51:
371:
449:
445:
167:
109:
182:
71:
569:
186:
139:
276:, trans. George Gorelik, Seaside, CA, Intersystems Publications, 1980.
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Aleksandr
Bogdanov’s Tektology: A Proletarian Science of Construction
551:
Aleksandr
Bogdanov’s Tektology: A Proletarian Science of Construction
482:
John Biggart, Peter Dudley, Francis King, Aldershot, Ashgate (eds.),
175:
143:
156:
171:
190:
525:, Centre for Systems Studies, University of Hull, Hull, UK, 1995
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Alexander Bogdanov and the Origins of Systems Thinking in Russia
212:(1913-1922) was that nature has a general, organized character,
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19:
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The first English translation of Bogdanov Tektology is due to
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attempts to establish Bogdanov as a precursor to contemporary
121:
553:, 2021. In CULTURAL SCIENCE JOURNAL 13(1), 2021, pp. 140-151
142:", through the identification of universal organizational
498:
Biographical Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Philosophers
453:
530:
Bogdanov's Tektology: Nature, Development and Influences
274:
Essays in Tektology: The General Science of Organization
228:
Alexander Bogdanov wrote several works about Tectology:
500:, London, Routledge, 2002 (first published in 1996),
214:
with one set of laws of organization for all objects
596:
468:John Biggart, Georgii Gloveli, Avraham Yassour.
269:in 3 volumes, Berlin and Petrograd-Moscow, 1922.
267:Tektologiya: Vseobschaya Organizatsionnaya Nauka
54:, but Bogdanov used it for a different purpose.
514:(1st Engl transl), Centre for Systems Studies,
260:Philosophy of Living Experience: Popular Essays
124:'s vehement opposition to Tectology in his own
91:Sources and Precursors of Bogdanov's Tectology
408:This is an extended quote from (Mikes, 1997).
256:Filosofiya Zhivogo Opyta: Populiarnye Ocherki
210:Universal Science of Organization - Tectology
102:Molecular Red: Theory for the Anthropocene
64:Tektology: Universal Organization Science
50:. The word "tectology" was introduced by
541:Biological Ideas of Bogdanov's Tektology
18:
372:"Aleksandr Bogdanov and Systems Theory"
345:
294:"Socialist Standard April 2007 page 10"
234:Poznanie s Istoricheskoi Tochki Zreniya
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146:: "all things are organizational, all
133:
566:: Reference covering Bogdanov's work,
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249:Empiriomonism: Articles on Philosophy
238:Knowledge from a Historical Viewpoint
170:. Tectology addressed issues such as
411:
369:
13:
462:
346:Haeckel, Ernst (January 8, 1904).
245:Empiriomonizm: Stat'i po Filosofii
14:
631:
557:
251:) in 3 volumes, Moscow, 1904-1906
208:The starting point in Bogdanov's
127:Materialism and Empirio-Criticism
536:(1983), Vol. 26, pp. 37–57.
521:Peter Dudley, Simona Pustylnik.
360:Gorelik, 1975; Mattessich, 1978.
100:More recently, in her 2016 book
120:, which may help in explaining
438:
402:
363:
354:
339:
321:
304:
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1:
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272:1980, English translation as
86:which was published in 1928.
33:(sometimes transliterated as
585:Science for the better world
472:, Aldershot, Ashgate, 1998,
7:
418:Mikes, John (31 May 2009).
57:
16:Precursor of systems theory
10:
636:
450:Centre for Systems Studies
370:Gare, Arran (2000-11-01).
534:Studies in Soviet Thought
388:10.1080/10855660020020230
350:– via Google Books.
240:), St. Petersburg, 1901.
223:
262:), St. Petersburg, 1912
118:dialectical materialism
46:and related aspects of
376:Democracy & Nature
80:General Systems Theory
76:Ludwig von Bertalanffy
27:
26:, founder of tektology
22:
512:Bogdanov's Tektology
448:and his work at the
37:) is a term used by
549:Simona Poustilnik,
539:Simona Poustilnik,
134:Topics in tectology
615:Russian philosophy
570:Alexander Bogdanov
516:University of Hull
454:University of Hull
39:Alexander Bogdanov
28:
24:Alexander Bogdanov
543:presented at the
348:"Wonders of life"
218:Simona Poustilnik
193:and precursor of
153:dynamic stability
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528:George Gorelik,
518:, Hull, UK, 1996
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112:theorists, like
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463:Further reading
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329:"Ernst Haeckel"
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605:Systems theory
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558:External links
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510:Peter Dudley,
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496:Stuart Brown.
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68:Norbert Wiener
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44:systems theory
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506:0-415-06043-5
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428:. Retrieved
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110:Anthropocene
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95:Ludwig Noiré
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318:"builder").
183:observation
72:Cybernetics
48:synergetics
599:Categories
580:Red Hamlet
281:References
187:perception
144:principles
140:experience
486:, 1998,
430:2 January
396:1085-5661
148:complexes
84:Tektology
62:His work
35:tectology
31:Tektology
176:emergent
172:holistic
58:Overview
532:, in:
78:in the
620:Monism
610:Holism
504:
490:
476:
456:in UK.
394:
316:tektĹŤn
312:Ď„Îκτων
254:1912,
243:1904,
232:1901,
199:Holism
265:1922
224:Works
191:unity
122:Lenin
502:ISBN
488:ISBN
474:ISBN
432:2021
392:ISSN
197:and
185:and
164:laws
157:unit
74:and
452:of
384:doi
166:of
89:In
70:in
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