Home Tools and Applications Internal Politics What Would Homo Systemicus Do? The Wisdom Of Viewing Our World Through An Organic Systems Lens

What Would Homo Systemicus Do? The Wisdom Of Viewing Our World Through An Organic Systems Lens

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 Photo Credit: NASA

Turning the lights on … and we thought they were already on

Wisdom puts the familiar in a new light. Before enlightenment we believe we see events clearly, as they really are.  Then, with the emergence of wisdom we find a different, at times startlingly different view, one that creates a fundamentally transformed understanding of our world. In this article I explore the wisdom that comes from accepting our nature as systems creatures, and from viewing our human interactions through the lens of an organic systems perspective.

While accepting that there may in fact be no whole systems, only systems within systems within systems, the essential elements of the organic systems perspective are these:

Photo Credit: G. Michael Smith

1.   Human systems – families, teams, organizations, cities, nations, ethnic and religious groups, among them – are both collections of individuals and whole organic entities interacting with their immediate environments.

2.   To understand human systems, we need to be able to see them both from the inside (their members’ experiences, beliefs and feelings) and from the outside (the form whole systems take as they interact with their immediate environments).

3.   For the most part our perspective is limited to the inside view. We neither see nor understand the wholes of which we are a part; nor do we recognize how our inside experiences are shaped by the processes of the whole. This system blindness is costly, resulting in needless personal stress,  broken relationships, lost opportunities, diminished system effectiveness and, in the extreme, bigotry, oppression, and war.

4.   The good news is this: Although we do not directly see the whole systems of which we are a part (for this we await the coming of homo systemicus), it is possible for us, as homo sapiens, to understand whole systems, their processes, and their effects on the experiences of system members. And that knowledge alone can help us avoid the destructive consequences of system blindness while creating more sane and healthy human interactions.

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