Systems Engineering

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Systems Engineering, not just system (singular) engineering, is a methodology to manage or cope with causally integrated systems[1]. To formally study systems engineering, one may read on the book by Leslie Lamport on Specifying Systems[2], and the paper by Patrick and Radhia Cousot on Abstract Interpretation[3]. For high-level systems management, pleas refer to Design Rules[4]


References

  1. Plamen L. Simeonov; Edwin H. Brezina; Ron Cottam; Andreé C. Ehresmann; Arran Gare; Ted Goranson; Jaime Gomez-Ramirez; Brian D. Josephson; Bruno Marchal; Koichiro Matsuno; Robert S. Root-Bernstein; Otto E. Rössler; Stanley N. Salthe; Marcin Schroeder; Bill Seaman; Pridi Siregar; Leslie S. Smith, eds. (December 9, 2011). "Stepping Beyond the Newtonian Paradigm in Biology" (PDF). local page: INBIOSA. 
  2. Lamport, Leslie (2020). Specifying Systems: The TLA+ Language and Tools for Hardware and Software Engineers. local page: Addison Wesley. ISBN 0-321-14306-X. 
  3. Cousot, Patrick; Cousot, Radhia (1977). Abstract interpretation: a unified lattice model for static analysis of programs by construction or approximation of fixpoints (PDF). 4th POPL. local page: ACM Press. p. 238-252. 
  4. Baldwin, Carliss; Clark, Kim (2000). Design Rules:The Power of Modularity. 1. local page: MIT Press. ISBN 9780262024662. 

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