Origine: Management Science (1968), Chapter 6, The Viable Governor, p. 154.
Anthony Stafford Beer: Frasi in inglese
“It is terribly important to appreciate that some things remain obscure to the bitter end.”
Origine: Management Science (1968), Chapter 4, An Alphabet of Models, p. 115.
“If cybernetics is the science of control, management is the profession of control”
Origine: Decision and control: the meaning of operational research and management cybernetics, 1966, p. 239 cited in: A. Ghosal (1978) Applied cybernetics: its relevance in operations research. p. 2 and many other sources.
Origine: Management Science (1968), Chapter 7, Automation and Such, p. 177.
Origine: Management Science (1968), Chapter 2, Chance, Risk and Malice, p. 41.
Origine: Management Science (1968), Chapter 5, It Works, p. 117.
Origine: Management Science (1968), Chapter 2, Chance, Risk and Malice, p. 37.
Stafford Beer (1985) Diagnosing the system for organizations Wiley, p. 99.
Origine: Management Science (1968), Chapter 2, Chance, Risk and Malice, p. 58
Origine: Decision and control: the meaning of operational research and management cybernetics, 1966, p. 242.
Origine: Decision and control: the meaning of operational research and management cybernetics, 1966, p. 239.
Origine: Management Science (1968), Chapter 4, An Alphabet of Models, p. 108.
Beer (1974) Designing Freedom. House Of Anansi Press, Toronto cited in: B. Dawson (2007) "Bertalanffy Revisited: Operationalizing A General Systems Theory Based Business Model Through General Systems Thinking, Modeling, And Practice", In: Proceedings of the 51st Annual Meeting of the ISSS, 2007.
Origine: Management Science (1968), Chapter 7, Automation and Such, p. 186.
Origine: Management Science (1968), Chapter 4, An Alphabet of Models, p. 96.
Origine: Management Science (1968), Chapter 6, The Viable Governor, p. 146.
Origine: Management Science (1968), Chapter 1, Processes and Policies, p. 10.
“The strategies that managers employ are at least as important as the facilities at their disposal.”
Origine: Management Science (1968), Chapter 1, Processes and Policies, p. 27.
Origine: Management Science (1968), Chapter 6, The Viable Governor, p. 142.
“Too close a view may interfere with one's grasp of an overall problem or concept”
Origine: Management Science (1968), Chapter 1, Processes and Policies, p. 21.
“There is, then, a logical priority about the arrangements, and logic has nothing to do with time.”
Origine: Management Science (1968), Chapter 3, Quantified Insight, p. 74.
Origine: Management Science (1968), Chapter 3, Quantified Insight, p. 88.
Origine: Management Science (1968), Chapter 3, Quantified Insight, p. 61.