Further to the discussions on trying to define Complexity perhaps one 
should first define Complexity Science.  I was struck by the analogy 
with Chemical Engineering (my own training) which is a diverse body of 
knowledge that allows its practitioners to design, build, operate, 
control, maintain, trouibleshoot, modify and optimize process plants, 
safely,  for many different industries (food, chemicals, energy, waste 
management, etc.) along with the parallel activity of performing 
theoretical and experimental research into the fundamentals of Chemical 
Engineering topics.  Chemical Engineering also appreciates systems and 
relationships with other professions: Process Control (Automation), 
Managment Science, Mechanical Engineering, etc.  No-one really cares 
whether a system becomes a chemical engineering system or not and there 
is no measure of  'chemical engineering'.  The body of knowledge is 
broken down into separate but interlinked subjects many without a unique 
claim to chemical engineering: thermodynamics, engineering drawing, 
process control, heat transfer, fluid mechanics, distillation, etc., 
etc.  So Chemical Engineering as taught is defined pretty much by the 
schools that teach it.  This has of course evolved over time to embrace 
computer modeling, digital process control and other recent innovations 
such as nanobiotechnology.  The American Institute of Chemical 
Engineering (http://www.aiche.org/) regulates the profession, sets 
standards in education and ethics for the US (see their Vision and 
Mission at http://www.aiche.org/About/WhoWeAre/Vision/index.aspx), as do 
similar organizations for other countries.  So Chemical Engineeing is a 
reflection of how society has organized itself around the term and the 
body of knowledge and its practioners. (Why does the image of a Klein 
bottle come to mind?)   BTW, univerisity taught Chemical Engineering has 
been claimed to have a useful half life of only 4 years.

Robert C
www.cirrillian.com




============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

Reply via email to