Physical system theory: fundamentals, recent developments and relationships with system dynamics
Abstract
Two important methodologies having some common grounds, but based on differing contexts and paradigms are Physical System Theory (PST) and System Dynamics (SD). The developments in both the fields have taken place almost independently, and attempts have been made to integrate the two to complement their strengths and limitations. This paper provides an overview of PST in terms of its foundations, philosophy, fundamental postulates, recent developments on its simplification and enlargement, and applications to socio‐economic and managerial systems. A comparison of PST is made with SD on different fronts so as to understand their similarities and differences for carving out their place in modelling of managerial and socio‐economic systems and integrating the two more meaningfully and flexibly. The paper is concluded emphasizing the need for a ‘Flexible System Theory’ which can relate many such systems based approaches and techniques on the whole continuum from hard to soft systems thinking to cater the whole spectrum of problem situations effectively.
Keywords
Citation
Sushil (2002), "Physical system theory: fundamentals, recent developments and relationships with system dynamics", Kybernetes, Vol. 31 No. 3/4, pp. 496-528. https://doi.org/10.1108/03684920210422584
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 2002, MCB UP Limited