Andrew Targowski
Andrew Stanislaw Targowski is a Polish-American computer scientist specializing in enterprise computing, societal computing, information technology impact upon civilization, information theory, wisdom theory, and civilization theory. One of the pioneers of applied information systems in Poland, he is an executive, university professor, scientist, civilizationist, philosopher, visionary, writer, and generalist.
In Poland he is known for developing a computerized the social security number for 38 million citizens, a prototype of INFOSTRADA, and authoring of the first books on applied information technology in business, economy, and society. In the United States he has developed one of the first digital cities in the U.S., teleCITY of Kalamazoo, Michigan. He concentrated on the cognitive informatics-oriented development of the theories of enterprise-wide system, information, communication, civilization, and wisdom.
Biography
Targowski was born in Warsaw, Poland. His father, Stanislaw, Adam was a lawyer, diplomat, politician, and writer. Targowski's father was arrested by the Germans in 1940 and sent to Auschwitz, later to Gross-Rosen and Nordhausen Mittelbau-Dora, where he was a slave worker for the production of V1 and V2 weapons. On March 21, 1945, he was publicly executed by hanging for sabotaging that production. Targowski's mother Halina Krzyrzanska-Targowska was born on her parents' large estate in Eastern Poland-Podole, now in Ukraine. She was a teenager when the Russian Revolution 1917 devastated her family, which resulted in her escaping to Warsaw. During the Warsaw Uprising she was wounded 14 times. She was able to take out her son Andrew from a pile of corpses, after the execution. After the War, Targowski went to the private W.Gòrski School in Warsaw. When Joseph Stalin died on March 23, 1953, he and other boys shot air guns at pictures of the state officials, hanging in a classroom, celebrating the too soon conceived victory over the occupiers. Consequently, he was expelled from the school and completed his baccalaureate at the T. Reytan School in Warsaw in 1954. He married Alicja Kowalczyk in 1962 and has a son Stan. After his divorce, he remarried Irmina Dura-Kubas in 1978 and has a son John and a step-daughter Agnieszka, and three grandchildren; Julian, Marcel and Veronica.Education
Targowski graduated from the Warsaw Politechnic from the Faculty of Industrial Engineering. Defended in a public presentation a master's degree thesis on "The Computerized Integrated Information Systems in the RAWAR T1 Factory," which was making military and civilian radars. In 1962 he formulated the model of a list of parts and components for highly complex products, characterized by 19 levels of assemblies and thousands of components. Nowadays, this kind of systems is called ERP. It was the first master thesis on Management Information Systems defended in Poland. During his study at the Warsaw Politechnic he actively participated in the famous Students Unrest in October 1956. This students' protest ended the Stalinist Era in Poland, but the "liberal" totalitarian dictatorship was still intact. As a penalty, he lost scholarship, and had to take a part-time job as a draftsman at an engineering bureau, designing brick factories. In 1969, Targowski defended his PhD dissertation on "The Conditions of the Optimization of Hierarchical Management Information Systems" at the Warsaw Politechnic. He proved in his dissertation that the optimal configuration of a hierarchical computer infrastructure had to be composed of mainframe and minicomputers. It defied the official state strategy, which preferred the development of mainframes only, since that kind of a strategy was pursued by the Soviet Union. He later supported Jacek Karpiński, a famous Polish designer of minicomputers. During his professional life he passed an intensive computer training at IBM schools in Belgium, Austria, the United Kingdom, and the U.S. He also passed an intensive computer training at the French company BULL in Paris in 1962–1964 and later in 1966 in United Kingdom, at ICT/ICL and NCR.Work in Poland
As a student, he was a co-author of the first National Program for the Development of Information Technology in Poland. In 1962 he founded the first Polish Systems Analysis Laboratory at the Institute of Machine Industry Organization. In this workshop, according to KERM Resolution 400, he participated as an executive in the design of the first Polish computer business management information systems at RAWAR – 1961, the Radio Plant Marcin Kasprzak in Warsaw – 1962, the Lamp Plant R. Luxemburg in Warsaw −1962, Truck plant in Starachowice – 1966. In 1966, he was able to bring to Poland the IBM 1440 machine, which was the first such contract with IBM then behind of the Iron Curtain. Between 1965–1971 as the first employee and CEO of Warsaw's ZETO-Zowar participated in the establishment of networks between Poland's 50 ZETO regional centers :pl:ZETO. ZETO computer centers employed about 5000 computer professionals. In ZETO-Zowar he initiated and oversaw the design of the first in Poland Production Calculation Software Package – now called ERP – advanced industrial processing systems, supporting integrated production management in the automotive plant FSO and Nowotko diesel engine plant in Warsaw, first on IBM 1440, and later on IBM System/360 main frames.As a volunteer he took part in the planning of the second National Informatics Development Plan for the years 1971–1975. He took over the design of the system nationwide directory of personal social security number: PESEL/Magister/PESEL. He developed the WEKTOR system for accounting and control of public investments. As the Deputy Director General of the National Office of Information Technology, he developed the concept of INFOSTRADA and the National Information System. INFOSTRADA and KSI development plans were hindered by the political authorities as too risky for the dictatorship of the communist system, because they promoted the free flow of information in society. From that moment the trouble started for Targowski's employment and publishing, and organized harassment of his person began: in 1977, he was removed from the editorial board of Informatyka :pl:Informatyka,, his publications were blocked. Then he was fired from consecutive jobs. Employed at the Institute of Building Machines in Kobyłka, he was asked to be absent at work. As a result of harassment he began efforts to go abroad. He was Poland's delegate to the Working Group on Automation at the United Nations,
Work in the United States
In January 1980 Targowski went to Mexico, and then in 1980 to the United States where he got political asylum. In the U.S., he worked in the Hamilton College, Western Michigan University Hofstra University, Eastern Kentucky University, and the longest, from 1985 until today, as a professor of computer information systems in Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, Michigan. In the 1990s he was first a chairman of the board overseeing the development of a teleCITY of Kalamazoo , in 1996 he was a director of that project, which he managed as a research project, simultaneously working as a faculty at Western Michigan University. In the United States, his experience on information highways from Poland, led to the launch of one of America's first digital city projects—Telecity of Kalamazoo.In the U.S. he specializes in areas such as strategy and architecture of integrated enterprise systems, semantic ladder, futurology, modeling of civilization theory, multiculturalism, the theory of wisdom and theory of information. In total Targowski independently published 40 books, and additionally with co-authors 10 chapters of other books in English. He also developed about 180 scientific and professional articles in Polish and English.
Volunteer work in professional associations in the United States
- IRMA, Information Resources Management Association – president of advisory council .
- ISCSC, The International Society for the Comparative Study of Civilizations – president .
- Foreign Member of Academy of Engineering in Poland .
- World Research Council of Polonia – president
- Colleagues International – president .
- Northern American Polish Engineer Council – founder, director, vicepresident .
- Polonia Technica, New York – honorary member .
- Polish Tennis Association – president.
- Northern American Polish Studies, chief editor of Studium Library.
- Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences of America New York, member .
- Polish Scientific Society in Exile, London, member .
- Józef Piłsudski Institute of America, New York, member
- American Polish Advisory Council, Washington, D.C.
- Dialogue and Universalism, Advisory Council vice-chairman .
- Association of the Children of Uprising 1944, honorary president
Theory of Enterprise-wide Systems
Information Society
Targowski was involved in the development of an Information Society since the early 1970s, when he promoted the development of INFOSTRADA in Poland. In that time he thought that this network will trigger the development of the Informed Society in a totalitarian state. However, the rulers had no interest in accomplishing that vision. On the other hand, the Dictatorship failed in 1989 with one of the main factors being the volume of underground uncensored press exceeding the volume of the official press, and it led to the rise of the Informed Society. While in the U.S., published a paper on "Computing in Totalitarian States: Poland's Way to an Informed Society.". In pursuing this issue he defined The Taxonomy of an Information Society, differentiating its 14 segments and offering a path of their development. He published it as a chapter in Y-chen Lan's book. In 2008 he was asked by Ernst & Young to plan the Information Society for Poland. He developed a comprehensive set of models for the state, regions, cities, and villages. He published it as a chapter in his book Information Technology and Societal Development.Electronic Global Village
Targowski recognized in the 1980s that Marshal McLuhan's concept of the Global Village must be extended into the Electronic Global Village, despite of the fact that the Internet was conceived just in 1983, after splitting ARPANET into MILNET and the Internet. He presented his concept at the II International Conference of Information Resource Management Association on May 22, 1991, in Memphis, Tennessee, and published about the new rising phenomenon in a paper on Strategies and Architecture of the Electronic Global Village in The Information Society-An International Journal, 1990, vol.7, no.3, pp. 187–202, analyzing also issues To Build or Not to Build? and To Inform or to Control? After 22 years, the first question got a positive answer, but the answer for the second question is still pending, due to the rising tendency by some agents "to control."Theory of Information
Targowski found some difficulties in designing information systems for business and administration who did not know the meaning of information. The quantitative theory of information defines information as I = -Log2 p. In business activities, if someone on Tuesday says that tomorrow is Wednesday, p=1 and then I=0. However, on Wednesday there may be a discount at a given store, what is very meaningful for an information user. He thinks that the traditional theory of information mostly deals with its syntax in a general sense, answering the question: how to process information?. Therefore, he developed the approach based upon its semantics, which means answering the question what information to process? He invented the concept of the Semantic Ladder, composed of the following units of cognition, organized as steps ; 1-DATA, 2-INFORMATION, 3-CONCEPT, 4-KNOWLEDGE, 5-WISDOM. First time he published this DICKW model in his book The Architecture and Planning of Enterprise-wide Information Management Systems, consequently he began to improving its graphic model in his following books. In his book he defined several perspectives and images of information. This approach defines the differentiated frameworks of IS design in the scope of data processing, information processing, concept processing, knowledge processing, and wisdom processing. He also differentiated approaches to information's conceptualization at the level of the macro-information ecology. It allowed him to define four universal laws of information:- Law I: The complexity of the ecosystem is proportional to the level of the existing information reservoir.
- Law II: Information generates consequences, which it cannot foresee.
- Law III: The precision and certitude of information is proportional to the simplicity of the object of information or inversely proportional to the complexity of the object.
- Law IV: The progress of the Information Wave generates relative ignorance and interdependence among people and globalizes humanity.
Theory of Communication
Targowski recognized in the Information Age, that for Hartley, and for the Shannon and Weaver model of communication process that followed, that interpretation of a communicated message is not part of communication process. In those models communication has no significant, human meaning. Since they care about channel capacity and signal quality. Only Korzybski's model focuses on matters communicated between the sender and receiver to a certain degree. Therefore, Targowski and Joel Bowman developed a new approach based on the semantic reaction paradigm, which includes more communication components and their role in understanding what is communicated. In consequence, they developed the Layer-based, Pragmatic Model of Communication Process. Those layers/links contribute to the logical understanding of communication between the sender and receiver and as the result generate reflective information. The quality of communication was defined in four possible outcomes; trans-communication, pseudo-communication, miscommunication, and para-communication. They published about it in two papers; "Modeling the Communication Process: The Map is not the Territory." and "The Layer-based, Pragmatic Model of the Communication Process.". In reaction to some critique of this model, Targowski expanded this theory by modeling cognitive processes engaged in communication. He published this in a paper "Beyond a Concept of a Communication Process.".In the Global Economy very often communicating parties come from different countries or even civilizations. Such a case Targowski and Ali Metwalli classified as asymmetric communication.
They investigated this kind of communication and defined its mathematical model allowing computation of communication efficiency and communication success probability. They defined the five following rules: Culture Richness Rule I, Communication Climate Rule II, Communication Ability Rule III, Communication Competitive Advantage Rule IV, and Communication Cost Rule V. They also founded that for example if an Egyptian communicates with an American, the former must invest in the cost of successful communication 1.8
more than the latter, due to 20 culture items included in that cost. They published their work as a chapter „The Framework for Cross-culture Communication Process Efficiency and Cost in the Global Economy” in ed. E. Szewczak and C. Snodgrass' book.
Theory of Wisdom
According to Targowski's approach, despite of wisdom's high status, the first sages had problems in dealing with wisdom and stated that only God have the privilege of having wisdom, and that people must follow their wise recommendations. Even philosophers in modern times continue to think the same way, perhaps due to their disappointment of humans’ unwise dealings. In the last 100 years, the issue of wisdom was treated by science as intelligence. The index of Intelligence Quotient scores are used in many contexts: as predictors of educational achievement or special needs, by social scientists who study the distribution of IQ scores in populations and the relationships between IQ score and other variables, and as predictors of job performance and income. However, IQ measures intelligence as the ability of solving problems, but not wisdom per se.The Targowski approach is based on the cognitive informatics approach and the following premises:
- Every mentally healthy individual has some level of wisdom in thinking and making decisions.
- Wisdom is not knowledge; it is a virtue. However, there is knowledge about wisdom which is just in status nascendi.
- Wisdom, in a very short definition is Prudent Judgment and Choice. Hence, one can perceive a person to be knowledgeable but not necessarily wise, and vice versa.
- Wisdom is not a synonym or an extension of intelligence. Intelligence is the ability to solve problems while wisdom is the final touch in prudent judgment and choosing a good solution among available options.
- Wisdom can be practical, theoretical, global, and universal.
- Wisdom can be taught. Left to the practice only, it is usually applied too late to impact the right course of action. Wisdom is as a plant which must be nurtured to grow.
Wisdom is time- and context-specific. There are unique wisdoms for different categories or types of mind, and wisdom means different things at the individual, family, professional, and civilization levels. The Basic Mind is intuitive, communicative, practical, and moral, allowing humans to function in civilization. The Whole Mind adds a theoretical component to the Basic Mind, allowing for knowing through logical reasoning, leading to the development of advanced science and technology. The Global Mind is a Whole Mind that is connected and digital, and allows humans to think beyond their immediate experience and existence. The future of the human mind is the Universal Mind, which will evolve if humans can cooperate to try to save civilization. In consequence, based on the presented empiric review of human wisdom Targowski perceives it in the following manner:
Human wisdom is a combination of individual, family, profession, and civilization wisdoms applying, according to the needs: BASIC, WHOLE, GLOBAL, and UNIVERSAL MINDS in order to provide practical, moral, theoretical, and method-oriented worldliness and universality, proceeding to prudent judgments and choices of concepts. They are supported by data, information, and knowledge – leading to conclusions, positions, solutions, decisions, actions, and so forth, which are understandable, competent, and sensitive. In a short, Targowski's practical definition describes wisdom as:
Wisdom is based upon skillful judgment and choice driven by the art of life. For many, the art of life still can be a puzzle. The key to this puzzle is in understanding and learning how to cope with the components and factors of wisdom. Targowski perceives the art of life as set of the following traits:be philosophical, be moral and ethical, control emotions, be reflective:remember-forget-connect, be altruistic, be patient, communicate your solutions, other. He published his wisdom theory in his book. In the Spring 2012 he taught a course on HRS 4900 Wisdom at the Lee Honors College at Western Michigan University and published his experience in his book. It was the first course on such topic at WMU and perhaps in the U.S.
Theory of Civilization
After the fall of Communism in 1989/1991 . The New World Order was announced and Francis Fukuyama proclaimed the end of history and the return to the ideals of the French Revolution. Unfortunately the world became not more peaceful but less, due to the war with terrorism. Samuel Huntington explained it as the clash of civilizations. Ever since Targowski has pursued this idea and became an active member of the International Society for the Comparative Study of Civilizations, eventually being elected its president for two terms. During his tenure he tried to transform the Society's interests from the early history of civilization to the current one. He learned a lot from such civilizationists as Arnold Toynbee, Pitirim Sorokin and Matthew Melko. He attempted to define a modern theory of civilization in his book. In contrast to the English-French-American Single Elemental Model and the German Two Elemental Model he developed the Three Elemental Model. He defined three Grand Laws of Civilizations :- Law I: People have seen themselves as entering the world with a potential of many gifts, and they hope to fulfill these gifts in the development of their own lives.
- Law II: People constantly aim for freedom; the range of this freedom depends on the level of the entity’s knowledge, communication ability, and the knowledge of the international community.
- Law III: Mankind consciously steers the development of civilization through the formulation and implementation of the main ideas and values of a given epoch.
- Law IV: The degree of a country’s historical success is proportional to a level of harmony among political, social, and economic domains.
Targowski thinks that over the last 200 years, civilization utilized three socio-political systems: Capitalism, Socialism and Communism, as well as their various combinations. None of these systems can control the Universal-Complementary Civilization. In this situation, a new socio-political system needs to be developed, which Targowski calls Ecologism, from the word ecosystem, a synonym of biosphere. The following aims will be set before it:
- Mission: implementing the policies of sustainable development of civilization.
- Aim: controlling population growth and the consumption of resources in such a manner that the next generation will have the same living conditions as the previous one.
- Strategy: sufficiency versus efficiency, with the society evolving towards a wise society.
- Main policies:
- *Nature is the most important.
- *People are more important than markets.
- *People's health is more important than money.
- *Sufficiency is more important than efficiency.
- *Business is subservient to and controlled by society.
- Ecologism includes the following subsystems:
- *Eco-education – based on eco-knowledge and wisdom.
- *Wise society – trained and educated in the knowledge of eco-education and having qualifications to wise decision-making.
- *Eco-democracy — all equal to each other but not to the environment, which is supreme to man.
- *Eco-justice – any violation of the law must also be assessed against and possibly punished for possible harm done to the environment.
- *Eco-infrastructure – operates in harmony with Nature and protects it against destruction.
- *Deep-economy – includes environmental and social costs alongside those of business and administration into cost-effectiveness calculations.
- *Deep media – comprehensively and impartially inform the society of the plight and development of the sustainable civilization.
Targowski is a realist and thinks that the likelihood of the introduction of the enforcement of Spirituality 2.0 is currently very small but given the good will of those involved, and particularly if they prove wise, might be possible.
Theory of Economics
Targowski as a generalist took the civilization and wisdom approaches to analyze the 2008 and beyond world economic/financial crises. He sees its roots in the transformation of Western Civilization into Global Civilization. Since each civilization is characterized by a Religion, the question is what is a religion of Global Civilization? Christianity ? No. Rather business is its "religion", a secular one. It implies that business values dominate the mind set of the world elite. Hence, the market economy expands into market society and everything is for sale. The wisdom approach says that what was once wise does not have to be wise today. The Keynes stimulation of the market worked well in the closed economy in the 1930s–40s. It does not work in the 2010s when the economy is open. The market economy worked after the World War II but today is controlled more by lobbyists than by the "invisible hand". Furthermore, just common sense wisdom tells us that a large country's service economy cannot grow, since is based upon weak income and low demand. The same level of wisdom shows that businesses are not created by the billionaires but by the customers with disposable income. The success of small and medium business depends on big business' cooperation. These kind of issues he and Edward Jayne put in a paper "The Business Religion of Global Civilization.". Also, Targowski initiated team research on Spirituality and Civilization Sustainability in the 21st Century. The results of this research should be published in 2013.Service Systems and Automation Laws
Since the Western-West Civilization is in decline in the 21st century, some political leaders suggest recovery from that state by emphasizing more innovations by business. One forgets that more innovations in service economies lead to higher unemployment. Hence, Targowski defined Laws of service :- Law I – Do not develop service systems without human presence.
- Law II – Do not develop service systems which harm society.
- Law III-Do not develop service systems which endanger human race.
- Law I. Do not implement high automation technology before you are sure that same goal can be achieved by another means.
- Law II. Do not implement automation technology with the aim to totally eliminate human presence in manufacturing process.
- Law III. Do not develop automation which harms society or endangers the human race.
Other works
Psychology
Targowski used his cognitive informatics approach and "connected" life's purpose: happiness and wisdom. His purpose was to define an approach to include wisdom, awareness of life's purpose, and happiness into constructs of resilience and resourcefulness of the human system. He found that wisdom, the purposes of life, and happiness must be recognized as indispensable attributes of human existence and nature, and they represent necessary resources that enhance resilience to all kinds of challenges. He offered a method how to test these traits investigated by psychologists. In summary, he also found that human wise life usually is accomplished through self-realization or self-creation within boundaries and degrees of happiness which depends on knowing a given life's purposes and on means leading to them. The former are subject to the development of one's capacities and aspirations as human potential for pleasing, shaped by social interaction. In the Western Civilization of the 21st century, a person's felicity implies liberty and freedom of choice. Targowski published this approach in a chapter "Wisdom, Awareness of Life's Purpose, and Happiness: the Cognitive Approach in Celinski & Grow's book.Health Care
policy became a very hot issue during the Barack Obama presidency. The health care business is the largest business in the U.S. and is characterized by the constant rise of its costs and about 50 million citizens who do not have any health insurance. One of the factors contributing to such a high cost is a high cost of processing data in this service. Targowski as a computer scientists and then a director of the Center for Sustainable Business Practices at the Haworth College of Business at WMU organized a regional conference on Health Care Crisis and Hope at the Fetzer Center, September 25, 2010. He found that the main problem is not with "data" but with a lack of a defined role of the national health care in the society. He offered the following principles of the American Health Care Services:- 1.The basic laws of the U.S. should be the foundation for the concept of health care:
- *The United States Declaration of Independence states that “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
- *The United States Constitution is also the base for the concept of health care. In the Constitution’s preamble is stated: “We the People of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.”
- *The concept of “Happiness” and “Welfare” in the 18th century were slightly different from today. We can assume that both terms currently mean “Well-Being of Americans.” This value is a constitutional opportunity of an American. Well-being is a very time and process-oriented value that cannot be guaranteed forever. Once accomplished, it can be lost to many internal and external factors. On the other hand, the United States Constitution supports this value by providing tools that help in pursuing this opportunity.
- 2. Good health of Americans is a constituent of their well-being. In other words, good well-being is usually determinant of good health. Without good well-being, Americans may not have good health.
- 3.Good health care is a constitutional opportunity of Americans. Today health care is very expensive. If it is free, it certainly will not satisfy the high expectations of Americans. Do they often perceive death as an option? The choice is between the right and privilege of having health care. It depends on the state's economic situation and societal and political support. In this respect today, Americans are divided almost equally between the right and privilege. Due to almost 16 percent of the population not having health insurance and high inequality, in times when 10 percent are unemployed and another 5 percent is out of statistics, to have a privilege of health care may lead to a lack of social tranquility which is expected by the U.S. Constitution. Therefore, basic health care should be perceived as the controlled right. It means that certain medical help is secured but its use is controlled and if it is abused by unwise life styles, it can be suspended.
- 4. Well-being of Americans means an equal access to sustainable economic vitality with minimized inequality, based upon a sustainable environment which delivers healthy food, fresh water and air, and culture-oriented activities.
- 5. Well-being of Americans is achievable through human and societal wisdom, meaning prudent choices made in economic, cultural, and technology-oriented processes.
- *In particular, political wisdom is very important, since it leads the whole regions and nation.
- *Human and societal wisdom requires mentally healthy people.
- *Human and societal wisdom requires well educated citizens.
- 6. Good health is possible if the Americans’ life styles are wise and good.
Multiculturalism
Targowski as an immigrant feels very well the issue of multiculturalism. In 1974-1975 when he was a visiting professor at Hamilton College, the American Catholic Hierarchy did not allow mass in Polish since the goal was to integrate immigrants within the American society. In the 2000s a concept of multiculturalism was evolving with the popularity of hyphenated Americans. In Western Europe, multiculturalism even evolved in many civic unrests, particularly in France. Steadily, the American nation has been transforming into the American political society, with the tendency to protect specific groups' interest. Therefore, Targowski undertook research on multiculturalism and among several solutions defined, he emphasized the importance of the role of the middle culture. This culture means – the full assimilation of immigrants, but particularly in the first generation is difficult. Therefore, in order to minimize their isolationist tendencies, one must require that these individuals accept the given state's culture, which is referred as the middle culture. This kind of culture includes awareness and skills of a state citizen:- National values,
- National symbols,
- Official language as a mean of communication out of the original culture,
- Intercultural communication – skills to communicate with another culture,
- Cross-cultural communication – skills to communicate with many cultures,
- Other
He published his findings in a paper "The Clash of Peoples in Civilizations with the Comparative Modeling Perspective." in Comparative Civilizations Reviews, Spring 2012, pp. 56–74. Those who have problems with immigration, he offers his personal approach "he loves Poland as his Mother, he loves the U.S. as his Wife."
Both "loves" are based upon loyalty, but of different kind.
Hobbies
In his youth in communistic Poland, Targowski avoided any involvement in communistic youth associations. However, the regime was clever and allowed young people to dance American rock and roll in in-door places to avoid any unrest at the streets. He applied this policy with good energy, but his main interest was in sport. He was Warsaw's representative in junior skiing. However, since Warsaw is located on a flat terrain, he could not compete successfully with those skiers, from the mountain regions, where they could ski every day. Therefore, he switched to ping-pong and tennis. In the 1950s he was junior champion of Warsaw in single and doubles. In 1979 he was an international champion of Poland in doubles . When Gomułka's hard hand regime fell in December 1970, he was asked by tennis players to be a candidate for president of the Polish Tennis Association. He was elected, but after conducting 32 meetings/year, each a few hours, he resigned, since he stopped playing tennis and could not carry his job at the national information technology office. In the U.S. he is a club player. In 2003 he won the championship of Michigan and Midwest and 5th place in the Nationals in super senior category, team doubles. In the 1990s–2000s he won three times the Irish Open Tournament in doubles. Now he plays #3, when he was just a runner up of Michigan in 2011. He plays at West Hill Athletic Club in Kalamazoo. Needless to say that in his tennis city there are boys nationals, organized for the last 70 years.Selected works
Information Technology
Books
- Informatyka klucz do dobrobytu,.. Warsaw: PIW, – Polish bestseller.
- Organizacja ośrodków obliczeniowych,.. Warsaw: PWŁ.
- Informatyka modele rozwoju i systemów,.. Warsaw: PWE.
- The Architecture and Planning of Enterprise-wide Information Management Systems, Map of the Enterprise.. Harrisburg, PA.: Idea Group Publishing..
- Strategia i architektura systemów informatycznych przedsiębiorstwa w gospodarce rynkowej,.. Warszawa: Nowe Wydawnictwo Polskie..
- GII: Global Information Infrastructure.. Harrisburg, PA.: Information Science Publishing..
- Enterprise Information Infrastructure.. New York: Simon & Schuster,
- Informatyka bez złudzeń – wspomnienia,.. Toruń, Poland: Wydawnictwo Adam Marszalek,.
- Electronic Enterprise, Strategy and Architecture.. Harrisburg, PA. & London: IRM Press,.
- A. Targowski & T. Rienzo.. Enterprise Information Infrastructure, Kalamazoo, MI.: Paradox Associates, .
- A. Targowski & T. Rienzo.. Enterprise Information Infrastructure, Kalamazoo, MI.: Paradox Associates, .
- A. Targowski & M. Tarn.. Enterprise Systems Education in the 21st Century. Harrisburg, PA.: Information Science Publishing,.
- A.Targowski.Historia, Terazniejszość, Przyszlość INFORMATYKI. Łòdź: WYDAWNICTWO POLITECHNIKI ŁÒDZKIEJ,.
- A. Targowski. The Deadly Effect of Informatics on the Holocaust. Mustang, Oklahoma: Tate Publishing,.
- A.Targowski. The History, Present State, and Future of Information Technology. Santa Rosa, California: Informing Science Press,.
- A.Targowski. Informing and Civilization. Santa Rosa, California: Informing Science Press,.
Book chapters
- Targowski, A. and A. Metwalli.. “The Framework for Cross-culture Communication Process Efficiency and Cost in the Global Economy.” In ed. E. Szewczak and C. Snodgrass. Managing the Human Side of Information Technology: Challenges and Solutions, Harrisburg, PA: Idea Group Publishing..
- Targowski, A.. “The Information Laws.” In D. White, Ed.Knowledge Mapping & Management. Harrisburg, PA: IRM Press..
- Targowski, A.. “Info-Mathics-The Mathematical Modeling of Information.” In L.Favre, Ed. UML and the Unified Process. Harrisburg, PA: IRM Press..
- Targowski, A.. “The Taxonomy of Information Societies.” In Yi-chen Lan, ED. Global Information Society. Hershey, PA: Idea Group Publishing..
- Targowski, A.. “The genesis, Political, and Economic Side of the Internet.” In L. Tomei, Ed. Integrating Information & Communications Technologies into the Classroom. Hershey, PA: Information Science Publishing..
- Targowski, A.. “The genesis, Political, and Economic Side of the Internet.” In Van Slyke, Craig, Ed. Information Communication Technologies: Concepts, Methodologies, Tools and Applications. Hershey, PA: Information Science Reference.
- Targowski, A.. “The Evolution From Data To Wisdom In Decision-Making at the Level of Real and Virtual Networks. In C. Camission et al. Eds. Connectivity and Knowledge Management in Virtual Organizations: Networking and Developing Interactive Communications. Hershey, PA & London: IGI..
- Targowski. A.. “The Enterprise System Approach.” In M.M. Cruz-Cunha, Ed. Social, Managerial, and Organizational Dimensions of Enterprise Information Systems. Hershey & New York: Business Science Reference..
- Targowski, A.. “A Role of Social Networking in Civilizational Development, Towards Better Communication and Reasoning in Global Virtual Nation and Virtual Nation.” In M.M. Cruz-Cunha & G. Putnik. Eds. Business Social Networking: Organizational, Managerial, and Technological Dimensions. Hershey & New York: Business Science Reference.
Civilization
- Targowski, A..Information Technology and Societal Development, Hershey, PA & New York, Information Science Reference,.
- Targowski, A. & T. Rienzo. Eds.. Newspapers in Crisis. Kalamazoo, MI: Civilization Press..
- Targowski, A.. Ewolucja techniki i związane z nią nadzieje w społeczeństwie XXI wieku - podejście cywilizacyjne.. In Zacher, L. Ed. Nauka, Technika, Społeczeństwo.. Warsaw: Wydawnictwo poltex..
- Targowski, A & Marek J. Celinski. Eds.. Spirituality and Civilization Sustainability in the 21st Century. Nova Science Publishers, 2013,.
- Targowski, A.. Global Civilization in the 21st Century. Nova Science Publishers, 2014,.
- Targowski, A & B. Han. Eds.. Chinese Civilization in the 21st Century. Nova Science Publishers, 2014,.
- Targowski, A.. Virtual Civilization in the 21st Century. Nova Science Publishers,.
- Targowski, A.. The Limits of Civilization. Nova Science Publishers,.
- Isaac, T. & A. Targowski. Eds.. African Civilization in the 21st Century. Nova Science Publishers,.
- Targowski, A.. Western Civilization in the 21st Century. NOVA Science Publishers,.
- Targowski, A & Abe, J & Kato, H. Eds.. Japanese Civilization in the 21st Century.NOVA Science Publishers,,.
Wisdom
- Cognitive Informatics and Wisdom Development, Hershey, PA. & New York, Information Science Reference, 2011,
- WISDOM. Kalamazoo, MI.: Civilization Press,.
- Harnessing the Power of Wisdom, New York: Nova Science Publishers, 2013,.
- Il potere della saggezza, Amazon Kindle edition, 2016. ASIN: B01LZA7GXD.
Health Care
- A.Targowski & G. Ruoff. Eds..Health Care, Crisis and Hope. Kalamazoo, MI.: Civilization Press,.
Psychology
- Targowski, A.. “Wisdom, Awareness of Life’s Purpose, and Happiness as Means of Resilience and Resourcefulness of Human System: The Cognitive Informatics Approach.” In Eds. M Celinski and K. Gove. Continuity versus Creative Response to Challenge; the Primacy of Resilience and Resourcefulness in Life and Therapy. Hauppauge, NY: NOVA SCIENCE PUBLISHERS, INC..
Politics
- Red Fasicm, Lawrenceville,. Lawrenceville,VA: Brunshwick Publishing Co.,
- Chwilowy koniec historii,.. Warszawa: Nowe Polskie Wydawnictwo,.
- Dogoniċ czas,.. Warszawa: Bellona, 1993,.
- Obrona Polski, dziś i jutro,.. Warsaw: Bellona, – Editor.
- Wizja Polski,.. Warsaw: Cinderella Books,, 2000 – Editor.
- Losy Polski i Ŝwiata,.. Warsaw: Bellona, 2000, – Editor.
- Obserwacje z USA,.. Warsaw: Cinderella Books,
- Spojrzenie z USA na Polskę, świat i nie tylko ,.. Warsaw: Biblioteka Nowego Kuriera,.
- Spojrzenie z USA na Polskę, świat i nie tylko ,.. Warsaw: Biblioteka Nowego Kuriera,.