• Vladimir Damgov (1947–2006) was a Bulgarian physicist, mathematician, union leader and parliamentarian, who particularly contributed to the application of chaos theory.
  • Herman Daly (1938) is an American ecological economist.
  • George Dantzig (1914–2005) was an American mathematician who is considered the “father of linear programming“.
  • Murray Gell-Mann (1929) is an American physicist and Nobel Prize winner in physics for his work on the theory of elementary particles.
  • Ralph Waldo Gerard (1900–1974) was an American neurophysiologist and behavioral scientist and one of the founders of the Society for General Systems Research.
  • Tom Gilb (1940) is an American systems engineer.
  • Harry H. Goode (1909–1960) was an American computer engineer and systems engineer and professor at University of Michigan. Until his death his was president of the National Joint Computer Committee (NJCC). He wrote the famous System Engineering Handbook together with Robert Engel Machol.
  • Brian Goodwin (1931) is a Canadian mathematician and biologist
  • Arthur David Hall III (1925–2006) was an American electrical engineer. He worked for years at Bell Labs. He was one ot the founders of the (IEEE) and was among the first general systems theorists. He wrote A methodology of Systems Engineering from 1962.
  • Debora Hammond is an American historian of science and a systems scientist.
  • Stephen G. Haines (1945) is an American organizational theorist, management consultant,
  • Friedrich Hayek (1899–1992) was a Nobel prize economist and a philosopher who made pioneering contributions to complexity theory. He notably wrote The Theory of Complex Phenomena (1967).
  • Derek Hitchins (1932 (?)) is a British systems engineer and was professor in engineering management, incommand & control and in systems science at the Cranfield University, Bedfordshire, England.
  • John Henry Holland (1929) is an American pioneer in complex system and nonlinear science. He is known as the father of genetic algorithms.
  • Rudolf Emil Kalman (1930) is an American-Hungarian mathematical system theorist, who is an electrical engineer by training.
  • J. A. Scott Kelso (1947) is an Irish neuroscientist, who in 1985 he founded the Center for Complex Systems and Brain Sciences.
  • George Klir (1932) is a Czech-American computer scientist and professor of systems sciences at the Center for Intelligent Systems at the Binghamton University in New York. Author of several texts on systems, includingArchitecture of Systems Problem Solving.
  • Klaus Krippendorff (1932) is a German cyberneticist, working on the mathematical foundations of cybernetics, general systems, communication and information theories.
  • Simon Ramo (1913) is an American physicist, engineer, and business leader.
  • Anatol Rapoport (1911–2007) was a Russian mathematician, psychologist and systems scientist. He is cofounder of the International Society for Systems Science.
  • Eberhardt Rechtin (1926–2006) was an American systems engineer and respected authority in aerospace systems and systems architecture.
  • Barry Richmond (1947–2002) was an American systems scientist,
  • Robert Rosen (1943) is an American biologist and systems thinker
  • Stuart A. Umpleby (1944) is an American cyberneticist working in the field of cross-cultural management, cybernetics, group facilitation methods, systems science and the use of computer networks.
  • John Nelson Warfield (1928(?)) is an American electrical engineering and systems scientist, and member of the Academic Committee of the International Encyclopedia of Systems and Cybernetics.
  • Kevin Warwick (1954) is a British Cybernetician with interests in artificial intelligence, robotics, control systems and biomedical engineering, especially implant technology.
  • Duncan J. Watts is an American professor of sociology
  • Paul Watzlawick (1921–2007),
  • Geoffrey West (1940) is a Britisch physicist.
  • Douglas R. White (1942) is an American complexity researcher, social anthropologist and sociologist.
  • Brian Wilson is a British systems scientist, known for his development of Soft systems methodology.
  • Stephen Wolfram (1959) is English theorist known for his work in theoretical particle physics, cellular automata, complexity theory, and computer algebra.
  • A. Wayne Wymore (1927) is an American mathematician and systems engineer. Founder and first Chairman of Systems and Industrial Engineering (SIE) Department at the University of Arizona.
  • Warren Weaver (1894–1978) was an American mathematician and communication scientist.
  • Norbert Wiener (1894–1964) was an American mathematician and one of the founders of cybernetics.