Multicausality

Explains the differences between multicasual and unicasual events and underscores the need to treat the two differently.

To view the full copyrighted abstract written in Warfield's own words please use http://ebot.gmu.edu/handle/1920/3394.

A pre-publication version of this paper written circa 2008 was shipped to GMU as a pdf document, on a DVD with other documents on 9 January 2009 to Robert Vay, Special Collections & Archives, Fenwick Library, George Mason University. The DVD containing this and other documents is stored in Box 99, Folder 7 of Warfield Special Collection.

NOTE: In Warfield's document <Fenwick Submission.wpd> which Rose found in a printout and which is probably still on his old computer,  John notes the following:   "Multicausality.  This is #73 in MY Papers in pdf and wpd.  It has been accepted by Atila."  Atila Ertas at Texas Tech in Lubbock, TX(This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.) was John's colleague in the Society for Design & Process Science (SDPS).  Atila is was editor of a journal Transdisciplinary  Journal of Integrated Design and Process Science (JIDPS).  Rose has no information from Atila himself, nor has she yet found any emails or other documents on this paper, as of August 2011. (r.w. August 2011)

EXTRA NOTE: Yes, this title was published and appears in 2015 in an online library started by ACM. Cit: Journal of Integrated Design & Process Science archive,  Volume 12 Issue 2, April 2008, Pages 27-29. IOS Press Amsterdam, The Netherlands, The Netherlands URL:  http://content.iospress.com/. See also "The Asymetric Trait." (r.w. Nov 17, 2015)

Additional Info

  • Category: Complexity, Planning, Solutions or Improvements for Complex Situations
  • Size: 42 p
  • Description: Email
Read 127 times Last modified on Monday, 26 March 2018 14:18

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