Title: Conceptualizing large complex engineering systems as socio-technical systems
1Conceptualizing large complex engineering systems
as socio-technical systems
Presentation Stockholm
Maarten Ottens
Department of Philosophy, Faculty of Technology,
Policy and Management
2- Introduction
- Approach
- Results
- Problems
3Why the interest in systems
I
- Engineers design increasingly complex systems.
Increasing in amount of elements and in sorts of
elements and operation possible between these
elements, etcetera. - Already complex systems are coupled, leading to
large-scale complex systems, like energy systems,
telecommunication, transport systems. - These systems fail due to non-technical causes,
organizational failure, legal failure.
4Socio-technical?
I
- We argue that these systems can better be
understood using the concept of socio-technical
systems - A system where next to technical elements, social
elements are essential for the functioning of the
system as it is.
5The research
II
- understanding
- What are socio-technical systems?
- modelling
- How can socio-technical systems be modelled?
- designing
- (How) can socio-technical systems be designed?
61. understanding
II
- Existing concepts/theories
-
- Case studies
- -gt
- Conceptual analysis
- lt-
- Feedback
7Existing concepts/theories
II
- Social sciences Actor-Network Theory,
descriptive, Callon, Latour - All elements are taken as intentional beings.
- Physics Complex Systems Theory, predictive
- Nonlinear dynamics, modelling systems by
modelling the elements with simple rules and
interacting - Engineering sciences Systems Engineering,
prescriptive - All elements as rational, logic, within laws of
physics and logic
8start Systems Engineering
III
- Conceptual mess, ambiguous, unclear
- but,
- Prescriptive, and actually used by engineers when
designing products - Engineers are our audience, we do engineering
philosophy
9Research focus
III
- Terminology what is Systems Engineering, kinds
of complexity - Constituents technical, social, products,
processes, agents (human/software), relations
operations - Boundaries what to include, what to exclude
10Terminology
III
- Systems engineering
- Systems engineering
- Synchronic system view, complexity in amount of
elements, sorts of elements and relations - Diachronic system view, complexity in phases in
design approach, e.g. life-cycle design
11Constituents
III
agent
agent
technical element
social element
technical element
social element
12IV
agent
agent
technical element
social element
technical element
social element
physical
abstract
13IV
agent
agent
intentional
Designers, users
no intentions
Designed, used
technical element
social element
technical element
social element
14Conceptual problems with modeland constituents
IV
- Are organizations (legal) agents or social
elements - Can legal, economical, organizational,
conventional elements be modeled as one element
or are they conceptually too different, compare
mechanical, electrical, pneumatic elements. - 3 kinds of elements -gt 6 possible relations -gt 4
kinds of relations
15Constituents relations
IV
technical-technical physical functional
technical-agent physical functional intentional
agent-agent physical functional intentional
agent-social functional intentional normative
social-social functional normative
social-technical functional normative
Kinds of relations
16Boundaries
IV
- Where does it begin, and where does it end,
conceptually and physically speaking? - Modal constraints
- Functional, physical, legal, ..
log
nom
leg
17Engineering Philosophy
- Philosophical clarification of engineering
concepts - Methodological problems/questions in engineering
(e.g., complexity, systems) - Engineers work with philosophically problematic
notions (e.g., what is the ontological status of
infrastructural objects?)