Fritjof Capra, in his book, "Belonging to the Universe" (1992. Penguin Books) developed a list of the characteristics for "new-paradigm thinking" in science. (His co-author, David Steindl-Rast developed a look-alike parallel for theology.)
I thought it might be interesting to develop a look-alike parallel for the commercial/management world. The idea is to use the structure below and adapt the words to suit the business world.
Some of the characteristics translate directly across but others may be a little more
challenging. We can either debate the various suggestions in the forum or you can send me your ideas which I will assemble and post back to the forum when they're in reasonable shape.
New-Paradigm Thinking in Science
by Fritjof Capra
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The old scientific paradigm may be called Cartesian, Newtonian, or Baconian, since its main characteristics were formulated by Descartes, Newton and Bacon.
The new paradigm may be called holistic, ecological, or systemic, but none of these adjectives
characterises it completely.
New-paradigm thinking in science includes the following five criteria - the first two refer to our view of nature, the other three to our epistemology.
1. Shift from the Part to the Whole
In the old paradigm it was believed that in any complex system the dynamics of the whole could be understood from the properties of the parts.
In the new paradigm, the relationship between the parts and the whole is reversed. The properties of the parts can be understood only from the dynamics of the whole. Ultimately, there are no parts at all. What we call a part is merely a pattern in an inseparable web of relationships.
2. Shift from Structure to Process
In the old paradigm it was thought that there were fundamental structures, and then there were forces and mechanisms through which these interacted, thus giving rise to processes.
In the new paradigm every structure is seen as the manifestation of an underlying process. The entire web of relationships is intrinsically dynamic.
3. Shift from Objective Science to "Epistemic Science"
In the old paradigm scientific descriptions were believed to be objective, i.e. independent of the human observer and the process of knowledge.
In the new paradigm it is believed that epistemology - the understanding of the process of knowledge - is to be included explicitly in the description of natural phenomena.
At this point there is no consensus about what the proper epistemology is, but there is an emerging consensus that epistemology will have to be an integral part of every scientific theory.
4. Shift from Building to Network as Metaphor of Knowledge
The metaphor of knowledge as building - fundamental laws, fundamental principles, basic building blocks, etc - has been used in Western science and philosophy for thousands of years. During paradigm shifts it was felt that the foundations of knowledge were crumbling.
In the new paradigm this metaphor is being replaced by that of the network. As we perceive reality as a network of relationships, our descriptions, too, form an interconnected network representing the observed phenomena.
In such a network there will be neither hierarchies nor foundations.
Shifting from the building to the network also implies abandoning the idea of physics as the ideal against which all other sciences are modelled and judged, and as the main source of metaphors for scientific descriptions.
5. Shift from Truth to Approximate Descriptions
The Cartesian paradigm was based on the belief that scientific knowledge could be achieve absolute certainty.
In the new paradigm, it is recognised that all concepts, theories, and findings are limited and approximate.
Science can never provide any complete and definitive understanding of reality.
Scientists do not deal with truth (in the sense of exact correspondence between the description and the described phenomena); they deal with limited and approximate descriptions of reality.
http://world.std.com/~lo/94.11/0114.html
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