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Fuller's strain of Synergetics differs enough from Haken's strain that the two really can't be developed together gracefully in the same article, so my hope is this article can be retained and developed into a reasonable article. The Synergetics page is now just a redirect to a corresponding disambiguation page. The disambiguation page is much like the Synergetics page was for much of its career before the material on Haken's strain of synergetics was added to it. The Haken version has developed nicely, and this article should be able to do the same now that it is not just an indignant intrusion on the Haken article. Bob Burkhardt (talk) 17:56, 2 April 2009 (UTC)
"His oeuvre inspired many researchers to tackle branches of synergetics: Haken explored self-organizing structures of open systems far from thermodynamic equilibrium," -- what evidence to we have that Synergetics by Fuller inspired Haken in any way? Applewhite told me Fuller was quite irritated that Haken would use the same title. I don't get the impression they were collaborating. Is this just a myth then? A citation is warranted, or we should take it out as pure speculation. Kirbyurner (talk) 01:56, 27 March 2021 (UTC)
"Many other researchers toil today on aspects of synergetics, though many deliberately distance themselves from Fuller's broad all-encompassing definition, given its problematic attempt to differentiate and relate all aspects of reality including the ideal and the physically realized, the container and the contained, the one and the many, the observer and the observed, the human microcosm and the universal macrocosm." I'd like to remove this whole sentence, which uses a lot of words to describe what in the end is a "problematic attempt" at definition. This is not the place to have verbose opinions. Plus it's condescending to leave Bucky with just "coining the word" but then maybe getting it wrong when it comes providing substance. That's "Bucky the popularizer" meme, however this is Fuller's original work and he's defining Synergetics ab initio, not popularizing something already out there incorrectly. We have other places where we talk about lack of acceptance, for whatever reasons. Let's use the section subtitled Academic Acceptance to summarize whatever happens to be the current status quo, which is itself not a static picture. Kirbyurner (talk) 04:17, 27 March 2021 (UTC)
"Amy Edmondson explored tetrahedral and icosahedral geometry" -- so do a lot of people; this is insufficient to distinguish what makes Amy's work connect especially to Fuller's (which it does, I don't deny it), so how might this be rephrased? Kirbyurner (talk) 16:24, 27 March 2021 (UTC)
Here is a proposed outline. A fragment now. Of course it will need to change if I don't find my recollection is validated by verifiable citations to our references. I will update this as I get things clearer in my mind.
— Bob Burkhardt (talk) 12:10, 13 April 2009 (UTC)
I'll suggest some notes here: Universe as partially overlapping scenarios, get across this is a consciously designed definition with a lot of intersubjective elements (partly why this is philosophy is its taking the trouble to "spin" Universe, not simply accept it as "a given" or "that which came from the Big Bang" or other silliness) -- special attention to "non-unitarily conceptual" and the dictionary analogy (limited bandwidth, human lag times); Science includes Bucky trusting many scientists, but then he accredits internally to Synergetics i.e. he decides what he means by "physicist" and just about every other word he keeps in play in this invented language i.e. we're not sure if he includes Laurie Anderson (Big Science), probably does; Thinking goes to Omnidirectional Halo, of core importance for keeping this cybernetics slash systems angle i.e. Synergetics is thinking about thinking (where the "meta" comes from in "metaphysical") -- explorations in the geometry of thinking let's remember; Syntropy/Entropy relates to Signal/Noise, also to Gravity/Radiation (see [4] ); Patterns (skip?); Space-filling: Mites, Sytes and Kites for sure, rhombic dodecahedron as just as important as pentagonal dodecahedron, a bias correction (does that mean we're not "Platonists"?); Great Circles: most important is the 25 and the 31, their juxtaposition and secondary great circles, LCD triangles, long tables of numbers, checkable (Bob maybe found some errors, computers still pretty new in 1970s, early dome tables had errors too, explains "leaking" says J. Baldwin, who smuggled them from Joe Clinton's lab to Dome Handbook prematurely (hey, it was war!)); Views: not sure what you mean here as get ten mathematicians in a room and some will shout about intuition, others extol the beauties of rigor and machine proofs, while some just rock back and forth, intimidated by all the shouting. Kirbyurner (talk)Kirbyurner —Preceding undated comment added 17:38, 4 May 2009 (UTC).
Hmmmm, not much progress in over a month I see. I was hoping some big name philosophy professor wanting to make a name for herself (himself) might weigh in with some sensitive reading, evidence of doing significant homework, really coming to grips. That'd help redeem the Ivory Tower from charges of bleeping over some of our best heritage yet still charging high tuition for the privilege. A literature professor, ala Hugh Kenner? Most of Fuller's honorary degrees were in the humanities [5], and don't think "honorary" means 2nd rate, means a school is willing to peg the value of its diploma to some role model without even charging tuition to that individual, means they really thought about it and mean it. So to have forty six of those is really saying something. Fuller was one of the most decorated academics of all time, bar none, yet he's hardly ever cited by his over-jealous contemporaries. I use that fact for marketing purposes (leverage) [6] 02:02, 6 June 2009 (UTC)Kirbyurner
I think the banner on inappropriate external links currently at the top of this article must refer to all the Synergetics references in the text which are in parens. At first glance, these are a bit cryptic as well. I think the fix is to move all to footnotes, and expand the labels to something like "Synergetics, Sec. XXX.XX". I imagine I will do this at some point if no one else does. Bob Burkhardt (talk) 22:54, 4 November 2011 (UTC)
I added a link to my Synergetics website, a popular go-to for long-standing, high ranking in Google search. Exactly what External Links are for. Now I see other issues have been raised by the Wikipedia gods (not relating to External Links). We're to make the page more accessible without losing any technical details. This is from early 2018. Kirbyurner (talk) 19:31, 23 February 2018 (UTC)
Also, separate thread, I see the Wikipedia gods have new worries about the tone of the article, although this was not registering as an issue for the many years its been available. Anyone want to discuss the "tone"? Kirbyurner (talk) 19:34, 23 February 2018 (UTC)
Starting a new thread. 97.115.7.92 (talk) 01:56, 27 February 2018 (UTC)
A first survey by me suggests the hypothesis that our posting is too dense because unbolstered by many auxiliary pages that would usually assist a reader grapple with a main topic of this size. For example Jitterbug Transformation has no page of its own in February 2018, nor do any of the various volumes so meticulously described: A, B, T, E and S modules. Given the granularity of Wikipedia, the absence of such pages bespeaks enormous holes in the "semantic web" we've at least started to address with this initial entry. 97.115.7.92 (talk) 02:00, 27 February 2018 (UTC)
Addendum, July 7, 2019: FYI my initial draft for this article is archived here: Synergetics at Wikieducator
Kirbyurner (talk) 21:48, 7 July 2019 (UTC)
I've reviewed the guidelines for removing tags and although I'm a stakeholder as the principal author, I see no conflict of interest as the flags were not with reference to contested facts or the verifiability of claims, but about tone and accessibility. This is essentially a synopsis of a published work, embellished with some historical context. Now that I've done some spring cleaning in March 2021, I'm hoping the tone is more tolerable and the content less all over the place about whether Synergetics is Fuller's own invented discipline (true) or some collaboration undertaken with Haken (false). The whole point of this page is to disambiguate, not to create fuzziness about the difference between Synergetics (Fuller) and Synergetics (Haken). Kirbyurner (talk) 16:57, 27 March 2021 (UTC)
These sources (scraped from Synergetics coordinates, now a redirect to this article) might conceivably be of use to some editor of this article:
Sec. 966.20; Sec. 987.011; Vol. 1, Sec. 400.011 and Fig. 401.01.