Nowy Sącz, Poland

Network and Operating System Administrator

Administrator sieci i systemów operacyjnych

Language: Polish Studies in Polish
University website: www.wsb-nlu.edu.pl/en
Network
Network and networking may refer to:
System
A system is a regularly interacting or interdependent group of items forming an integrated whole. Every system is delineated by its spatial and temporal boundaries, surrounded and influenced by its environment, described by its structure and purpose and expressed in its functioning.
System
A system is defined as any combination of matter that we wish to study
Earl Bowman Millard (1946). Physical chemistry for colleges: a course of instruction. p. 30.
System
By the term architectonic I mean the art of constructing a system. Without systematic unity, our knowledge cannot become science; it will be an aggregate, and not a system. Thus architectonic is the doctrine of the scientific in cognition, and therefore necessarily forms part of our methodology.
Reason cannot permit our knowledge to remain in an unconnected and rhapsodistic state, but requires that the sum of our cognitions should constitute a system. It is thus alone that they can advance the ends of reason. By a system I mean the unity of various cognitions under one idea. This idea is the conception--given by reason--of the form of a whole, in so far as the conception determines a priori not only the limits of its content, but the place which each of its parts is to occupy. The scientific idea contains, therefore, the end and the form of the whole which is in accordance with that end. The unity of the end, to which all the parts of the system relate, and through which all have a relation to each other, communicates unity to the whole system, so that the absence of any part can be immediately detected from our knowledge of the rest; and it determines a priori the limits of the system, thus excluding all contingent or arbitrary additions. The whole is thus an organism (articulatio), and not an aggregate (coacervatio); it may grow from within (per intussusceptionem), but it cannot increase by external additions (per appositionem). It is, thus, like an animal body, the growth of which does not add any limb, but, without changing their proportions, makes each in its sphere stronger and more active.
We require, for the execution of the idea of a system, a schema, that is, a content and an arrangement of parts determined a priori by the principle which the aim of the system prescribes.
Immanuel Kant (1787). The Critique of Pure Reason.
System
Everyone knows what engineering is. All that's left is to define systems, and I'm not fool enough to do that.
Robert Machol (1971) in: Paul Lewis "Mathmaticians Are Useful." The California Tech. May 6, 1971. p. 1: Machol explains his definition of systems engineering.

Contact:

ul. Grunwaldzka 17
33-300 Nowy Sącz
tel. +48 18 44 99 100
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