Bitte haben Sie einen Moment Geduld, wir legen Ihr Produkt in den Warenkorb.
Bitte haben Sie einen Moment Geduld, wir legen Ihr Produkt in den Warenkorb.
You have probably noticed that some problems keep coming back.A team misses deadlines, so you add more oversight. The delays get worse. A city builds more roads to reduce traffic. Within months, the new lanes are clogged. A well-intended policy promises to fix a social issue. Years later, the problem is worse, and no one agrees why.These are not failures of effort. They are failures of how we see.We are trained to think in straight lines. Cause A leads to effect B. This works for simple problems-a flat tire, a burned-out lightbulb. But the problems that matter most-the ones that recur despite our best efforts-are not simple. They are complex. And complex systems behave like webs: interconnected, circular, and surprising.Seeing the Whole: A Systems Thinking Primer is an invitation to see those webs.This is not a technical manual. No equations, no mathematical models. It is a lens-a way of seeing that focuses on relationships rather than events, on patterns rather than blame, on loops rather than linear causes.You will learn: - Why linear thinking fails in complex systems- What a system is-and what it is not- Why stocks and flows explain everything from weight loss to climate change- How reinforcing loops create growth and collapse- How balancing loops resist change and maintain stability- Why delays are hidden drivers of failure- How to recognize and escape common traps- Where to push for lasting change-and where not to- A practical five-question diagnostic toolkit- What systems thinking cannot do-and why that mattersNo special background is needed. No mathematics beyond basic arithmetic. No economics, engineering, or computer science. Just curiosity and a willingness to see differently.This book is honest about limits. Systems thinking cannot predict the future. It cannot overcome power by itself. It will never tell you what to value-only what is happening. That honesty is the foundation of trust.Each chapter opens with a story, develops key concepts through real examples, and ends with simple exercises.The world is messy, connected, and changeable. This book will help you see it as it is-and equip you to act on what you see.Table of ContentDedicationAcknowledgment>Part I: What Is Systems Thinking?Chapter 1: When Simple Answers Are Not Enough 13Chapter 2: What Is a System? 30>Part II: How Systems BehaveChapter 4: Reinforcing Loops - Engines of Growth and Collapse75Chapter 5: Balancing Loops - Forces of Resistance and Stability 95>Part III: System Traps, Levers, and PracticeChapter 7: Common Traps - Why Well-Intended Interventions Fail 135Chapter 8: Leverage Points - Where to Push for Systemic Change 155>Part IV: Limits and BecomingChapter 10: What Systems Thinking Cannot Do 198Chapter 11: Becoming a Systems Thinker & Concluding Observations 216Bibliography 228
Wie gefällt Ihnen unser Shop?