Fromsystematic +-ics.
systematics (uncountable)
- The study ofclassificationsystems andnomenclature.
2009, Victor Lux Tonn,Systematics and the Economics of Culture,→ISBN, page187:Systematics is intended to be the study of "qualitative" and structural aspects of all things in the universe; and if feasible, is designed to absorb eventually the "quantitative approach" of mathematics toward human and physical worlds as well. It is hoped thatsystematics will be able to develop a quantitative field and thus to enable it to incorporate mathematics into its realm of studies some time in the future.
2012, Ward C. Wheeler,Systematics: A Course of Lectures,→ISBN, page2-6:Trees are the central objects of systematic analysis. Taxa are ordered, characters explained, and hypotheses tested on trees. Sincesystematics informs and draws on other areas of science, there is a diversity of terminology for trees and their components.
- Theclassification system of a branch ofscience, especially the classification oforganisms in biology.
- A branch ofChristiantheology that formulates anorderly,rational, andcoherent account of Christian beliefs. It comprisesdogmatics,ethics andphilosophy ofreligion.
1990, Robert M. Doran,Theology and the Dialectics of History,→ISBN, page 7:Systematics is an effort to understand those specifically theological affirmations that the theologian holds to be true and so regards as doctrines.
1990, Bernard J. F. Lonergan,Method in Theology - Volume 12,→ISBN, page335:The seventh functional specialty,systematics, is concerned with promoting an understanding of the realitites affirmed in the previous specialty, doctrines.
2006, M. James Sawyer,The Survivor's Guide to Theology,→ISBN, page208:Not exegesis itself, then, but biblical theology, provides the material forsystematics .... Bliblical theology is not, then, a rival ofsystematics; it is not even a parallel product of the same body of facts, provided by exegesis; it is the basis and source ofsystematics.
- Theplace wherelegalprovisions stand as relevant for theirinterpretation.
1989, Aleksander Peczenik, “Coherence, Truth and Rightness in the Law”, in Patrick J. Nerhot, editor,Law, Interpretation and Reality. Essays in Epistemology, Hermeneutics and Jurisprudence, Springer Science+Business Media,→ISBN,page300:Different kinds of systematic interpretation of statutes affect each other. Construction of a statutory provision depends at the same time on interpretation of other provisions,systematics of the statute, conceptual analysis and theories formulated in legal dogmatics.
Depending on context, when used to mean the classification of biological organisms, this may be the same astaxonomy or distinct. When distinct, systematics can mean the research into the relationships of organisms (phylogenetics), while taxonomy involves itself in the recognition and the naming of taxa. Alternatively, Systematics can mean the broader category that includes both phylogenetics and taxonomy.
the systematic classification of organisms
place where legal provisions stand