Environment

An environment is a complex of external factors that acts on a system and determines its course and form of existence. An environment may be thought of as a superset, of which the given system is a subset. An environment may have one or more parameters, physical or otherwise. The environment of a given system must necessarily interact with that system.

Generally, the environment or milieu of some object or action consists of the substances, circumstances, objects, or conditions by which it is surrounded or in which it occurs. (Although the two terms are usually synonyms, some sciences prefer the less common milieu to avoid confusion with the more wider-known meanings of environment in ecology, politics, and sociology.)

Either word may be used with specialized meaning in various contexts:

Contents

Life science

Physical science

Liberal arts and social science

Computer science and informatics

See also

External links

This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. If an article link referred you here, you might want to go back and fix it to point directly to the intended page.

See also: Environment, Acid (chemistry), Action (philosophy), Air, Animal extinction, Architecture, Base (chemistry), Biochemistry, Biology