Derek Hitchins (1935) British systems engineer
Source: Putting systems to work (1992), p. 6; as cited in: Stuart Anderson (2006) "Heterogeneous Modelling of Evolution for Socio-technical Systems"
Regarding radicals of the right, “Public Policy and Military Responsibility,” speech at the opening session of the National War College and the Industrial College of the Armed Forces, Washington, D.C., August 21, 1961, Congressional Record, vol. 107, p. 16444.
Derek Hitchins (1935) British systems engineer
Source: Putting systems to work (1992), p. 6; as cited in: Stuart Anderson (2006) "Heterogeneous Modelling of Evolution for Socio-technical Systems"
Clare Fischer (1928–2012) American keyboardist, composer, arranger, and bandleader
As quoted in "Fischer: a Ferocious Teddy Bear : Pianist Says He's Soft and Cuddly--When You Stay on His Good Side" http://articles.latimes.com/1992-07-03/entertainment/ca-1426_1_teddy-bear by Don Heckman, in The Los Angeles Times (July 3, 1992)
John F. Kennedy (1917–1963) 35th president of the United States of America
1960, Sport at the New Frontier: The Soft American
John F. Kennedy (1917–1963) 35th president of the United States of America
1961, Address before the American Society of Newspaper Editors
Ellen Willis (1941–2006) writer, activist
"Tom Wolfe's Failed Optimism" (1977), Beginning To See the Light: Pieces of a Decade (1981)
Context: My education was dominated by modernist thinkers and artists who taught me that the supreme imperative was courage to face the awful truth, to scorn the soft-minded optimism of religious and secular romantics as well as the corrupt optimism of governments, advertisers, and mechanistic or manipulative revolutionaries. I learned that lesson well (though it came too late to wholly supplant certain critical opposing influences, like comic books and rock-and-roll). Yet the modernists’ once-subversive refusal to be gulled or lulled has long since degenerated into a ritual despair at least as corrupt, soft-minded, and cowardly — not to say smug — as the false cheer it replaced. The terms of the dialectic have reversed: now the subversive task is to affirm an authentic post-modernist optimism that gives full weight to existent horror and possible (or probable) apocalyptic disaster, yet insists — credibly — that we can, well, overcome. The catch is that you have to be an optimist (an American?) in the first place not to dismiss such a project as insane.
Corrado Maria Daclon (1963) Italian journalist and scientist
From Geopolitics of Environment, A Wider Approach to the Global Challenges, La Comunità Internazionale, no. 4, (2007)
Harold Koontz (1909–1984)
Source: "The Management Theory Jungle," 1961, p. 177
Robert L. Flood (1959) British organizational scientist
Robert L. Flood (1993) Dealing with Complexity: An Introduction to the Theory and … - Pagina 127.