Hi Norman,
I recalled that you are also in San Diego.
Maybe we can meet and talk sometimes here :)
I cannot force myself to do that written discussions.
I am a publisher and would like to form my plan for 2002.
I would like to include there cybernetics and systems books.
Maybe you would be able to  help.
Regards
Igor Tsigelny
----- Original Message -----
From: Norman K. McPhail <norm@SOCAL.WANET.COM>
To: <pcp-discuss@lanl.gov>
Sent: Monday, September 11, 2000 1:54 PM
Subject: [pcp-discuss:] The Missing Elephant
> SOME OBSERVATIONS REGARDING A MISSING ELEPHANT Donald N.
> Michael
>
> [A version of this article appeared in Journal of
> Humanistic Psychology, January, 2000.  Copyright 2000 Sage
> Publications, Inc.  Don Michael is the author
> of Learning_to_Plan_and_Planning_to_Learn, the formative
> book on organizational behavior, which he wrote in 1973
> before there was a field of Organizational Behavior.
>
> I'd like to hear the "scientific," "systems" and cyberneutic response to
> the points made in this article.
>
> NKM]
>
>     "I'd like to share some of my current thinking about the
>      predicament of being human -- the dark side, as well as the
>      bright.  This is my thinking in process; I have not reached
>      any conclusions.  Your willingness to consider these ideas,
>      and your critical response to them, will help me with
>      further mulling.
>
>     "I'll begin with a Sufi story we're all familiar with. It's
>      the story of the blind persons and the elephant.  Recall
>      that persons who were blind were each coming up with a
>      different definition of what was 'out there' depending on
>      what part of the elephant they were touching.  Notice that
>      the story depends on a storyteller, someone who can see
>      that there is an elephant. What I'm going to propose today
>      is that the storyteller is blind.  There is no elephant.
>      The storyteller doesn't know what he or she is talking
>      about.
>
>     "Less metaphorically, I'll put it this way: What is
>      happening to the human race, in the large, is too complex,
>      too interconnected and too dynamic to comprehend.  There is
>      no agreed upon interpretation that provides an enduring
>      basis for coherent action based on an understanding of the
>      enfolding context.
>
>     "Consider.  Take any subject that preoccupies us.  Attend
>      to all the factors that might substantially affect its
>      current condition, where it might go, what might be done
>      about it, and how to go about doing so.
>
>     "I'll take, as an example, poverty.  Think of the variety of
>      factors that connect with poverty that we must comprehend
>      if we are attempting to understand everything that
>      seriously impacts poverty.  One would have to attend to at
>      least: technology, environment, greed, crime, drugs,
>      family, media manipulation, correction, education,
>      governments, market economy, information flows, ethics,
>      ideology, personalities and events.  All of these infuse
>      any topic that we pay attention to and try to do something
>      about. But, clearly we can't attend to all of these (and
>      others) because each has its own multifaceted realm to be
>      comprehended.
>
>     "Poverty is just one of endless examples.  What we're faced
>      with, essentially, is the micro/macro question:  How
>      circumstances in the small affect circumstances in the
>      large and how circumstances in the large affect
>      circumstances in the small.  And we don't know --
>      'butterfly effects' and chaos theory, notwithstanding --
>      how the micro/macro interchange operates in specific human
>      situations.  And for reasons I shall come to, I don't think
>      we can know. In effect, we don't comprehend the kind of
>      beast that holds the parts together and how they're held
>      together for the human condition we call poverty.  There
>      isn't any elephant there.
>
>     "Having said this, let me emphasize before we go any
>      farther, that I'm in no sense belittling our daily efforts
>      to engage issues like poverty, or other aspects of the
>      human condition.  I wouldn't be taking your time if I felt
>      that what many of us are about was futile.  Instead I hope
>      to add a deeper appreciation of the existential challenge
>      we face, the poignancy of our efforts, and the admiration
>      they merit as we try to deal with our circumstances.
>
>     "If we could acknowledge that we don't know what we're
>      talking about when we try to deal with any of the larger
>      human issues we face, this acknowledgement would have very
>      significant implications.  These implications would cover
>      how we perceive ourselves as persons and how we act to help
>      the human condition, including ourselves. I'll come to them
>      later.
>
>     "But first, I want to offer some observations in support of
>      my proposal that we don't know what we're talking about in
>      the large, by describing six contributors to our ignorance
>      -- six characteristics that seem to be to be the source of
>      the storyteller's blindness.  I call them 'ignorance
>      generators.'
>
>     "One more prefatory remark: I intend my observations to be
>      as non-judgmental as I can make them. I believe I am
>      describing characteristics of the human world that simply
>      *are*, analogous to the laws of nature. I am trying to be
>      an observer, not an evaluator. However, the very nature of
>      my language and what I choose to emphasize conveys values,
>      hence judgments, often unknown to me.
>
>     "The first of the six is that we have too much and too
>      little information to reach knowledgeable consensus and
>      interpretation within the available time for action.  More
>      information in the social realm generally leads to more
>      uncertainty, not less. (Consider, for example, the status
>      of the world economy.  We need more information to
>      understand the information we have.)  So the time it takes
>      to reach agreement on the interpretation increases. During
>      that time the information increases as well.  We need more
>      information to interpret the information we have and on and
>      on.
>
>     "Among the information we have is that which increases our
>      doubt about the integrity and sufficiency of the
>      information we do have.  There's enough information,
>      nevertheless, (or too little in many cases) to generate
>      multiple interpretations of that information, which then
>      adds another layer of information and interpretation that's
>      required to use that information.
>
>     "Related and central, information feedback and feed forward
>      very seldom is available at the time appropriate to use it.
>      It arrives either too soon or too late, if at all. So there
>      is too much or too little information at the wrong time.
>      So, the first ignorance generator is too much or too little
>      information to reach knowledgeable decisions in a finite
>      amount of time available for taking action.
>
>     "Second, there is no shared set of value priorities.  We
>      make much of the fact that we share values - it is a truism
>      that humans want the same basic things.  Perhaps, at a
>      survival level, they do.  Perhaps, but certainly beyond
>      that there is no shared set of priorities with regard to
>      values. Priorities change with circumstance, time, and
>      group.
>
>     "Here are some examples where value priorities differ
>      depending on the group and circumstance: Short term
>      expedience versus long term prudent behavior and vice
>      versa.  Group identity versus individual identity.
>      Individual responsibility versus societal responsibility.
>      Freedom versus equality.  Local claims versus larger claims
>      for commitment.  Universal rights versus local rights that
>      can repudiate universal rights (fundamentalism, for
>      example).  Human rights versus national interest (e.g.,
>      economic competition or nationalist terrorism).  Public
>      interest versus privacy (encryption versus crime-fighting).
>      First amendment limits (pornography, etc.). One potential
>      gain versus it potential social costs.  Who sets the rules
>      of the game and who decides who decides?  These are all
>      issues in which the priorities of values are in contention.
>      There's no reliable set of priorities in place that can be
>      used to interpret the larger issues. A third contribution
>      to this lack of comprehension is what has been called the
>      dilemma of context.  How much do you need to know in order
>      to feel responsible for actions and interpretations?  How
>      many layers of understanding are necessary to have enough
>      background to deal with the foreground?  There are no
>      agreed-on criteria or methodology for how deeply to probe.
>
>     "(I should have said at the beginning that these 6 factors
>      are interconnected, interactive, so that the question of
>      how much context is necessary in a situation to decide what
>      to do about that situation very much depends on what values
>      are held by participants in that decision making. And that
>      raises another intractable context question: who are the
>      legitimate participants in the decision making with regard
>      to what constitutes the context? And who says so?)
>
>     "The obvious example we're all living with at this time has
>      to do with what domains of context are applicable to the
>      Clinton impeachment inquiry. Just to remind you of a few:
>      The dramatis personae, their motives, the world of the
>      media, cultural differences in public responses, political
>      styles and susceptibility to rhetoric, the legitimacy of
>      public opinion as a basis for evaluating the situation.,
>      the intentions of the Constitutional founders, and so on.
>
>     "You can choose any issue that's important to you and ask
>      yourself, 'How much do I/we need to know about x to have
>      adequate context for thought and action?'  And then, for x,
>      you can use that list of topics I enumerated in the poverty
>      example.  This is an unresolved realm. And it is unsolved
>      for me as well in the very act of giving this talk.
>
>     "A fourth item.  Our spoken language, the language we hear,
>      can not adequately map the complexity that I'm talking
>      about.  Our language, because we hear it or we read it, is
>      linear.  So, one thought follows another.  Our language can
>      not adequately engage multiple factors simultaneously.
>      (Perhaps poetry can, but we haven't yet figured out how to
>      use poetry to make policy, or to resolve issues of context,
>      or to value priorities, or the like. And perhaps some forms
>      of visual language can, because they can be presented
>      simultaneously in three dimensions.) Our noun/verb
>      structure emphasizes, items, events, static-ness, [i.e.,
>      is-ness]---e.g., we say, 'this is a microphone', rather
>      than engaging it as a multitude of processes in time and
>      space.
>
>     "Nor can our language adequately map in our minds the on-
>      going circularity of cause and effect -- producing causes,
>      producing effects. Nor can it map the sustaining of a
>      system as a system, by virtue of the in-built circular
>      feedback that holds its boundaries together. In other
>      words, our spoken, written language doesn't allow us to
>      talk about these complexities in ways that are inherently
>      informative about the complexities.  In fact, it compounds
>      these complexities because in its linearity, language
>      unavoidably distorts a world of simultaneous multiple
>      circular processes.
>
>     " The fifth contribution to our inability to know what we
>      are talking about is that there is an increasing, and given
>      the other factors, an unavoidable absence of reliable
>      boundaries.  By boundaries, I mean boundaries that
>      circumscribe turf, relationships, concepts, identity,
>      property, gender, time, and more. Without boundaries, we
>      can't make sense of anything.  William James, wrote of a
>      boundary- less world as one of 'booming, buzzing
>      confusion.'  Boundaries are about how we discriminate, how
>      we partition experience in order to create meaning in all
>      those non- material realms, not just turf.  But what is
>      happening in this world, for reasons I've been describing
>      (and others as well), is that these boundaries and their
>      reliability are increasingly eroded and disintegrated.
>      They are becoming more and more ambiguous. All systems,
>      including social systems, require boundaries in order to be
>      coherent systems. The feedback that is determined by the
>      boundaries of a system allows that system to be self-
>      sustaining.  If there are no boundaries, there is no
>      feedback, no self-sustaining quality and no system. In
>      other words, no 'elephant'.
>
>     "Everything I've been saying so far reduces the agreed upon
>      criteria for boundary- defining feedback.  Here are some
>      examples of blurred boundaries: political correctness,
>      identity, public versus private, intellectual property,
>      biological ethics.  These are increasingly ambiguous areas,
>      taken very seriously, that, nevertheless, don't allow the
>      kind of linguistically and behaviorally discriminating
>      boundary defining I think necessary to begin to comprehend
>      the incomprehensible complexity that we humans live in.
>
>     "The sixth contributor to our inability to know what we are
>      talking about is the self- amplifying, unpredictable acting
>      out of the shadow residing in each human; our instincts,
>      our extra-rational responses.  These could be considered a
>      consequence of the other contributors to our ignorance --
>      though each of them is also a consequence of all the
>      others. (Or so I think.)  To be sure, these allow for more
>      creativity, but often in this complex world, they also
>      serve up violence, oppression, selfishness, extreme
>      positions of all stripes.  They are the source of an
>      upwelling of the non-rational, the non-reasonable that is
>      so increasingly characteristic of all the world, not just
>      the United States.
>
>     "There was a time -- a long time -- when this sort of
>      shadow-driven acting out was more restrained.  The elephant
>      depends on constraints, on boundaries, to be an elephant.
>      In the past, ritual, repression, and suppression served to
>      constrain such acting out or to quash it entirely.  One's
>      social and economic survival depended on playing by many
>      explicit and implicit rules.  Boundaries were stronger.
>      (Think of the up welling of violence after the collapse of
>      the Soviet Empire.)   These circumstances make human
>      governance uniquely problematic.  By governance, I mean
>      those shared practices by which a society's members act
>      reliably toward each other. Government is one such way such
>      practices are established via laws etc.  Shared child
>      socialization practices and formal religions are others.
>      For the reasons I am proposing here the processes of
>      governance can only become less and less effective. This in
>      turn increases unreliably and adds it's own contributions
>      to the incomprehensibility of it all.
>
>     "So much for the six 'ignorance generators'.  Perhaps they
>      are variations on one theme and surely others could be
>      added.   But I hope these are enough to make a presumptive
>      case that our daily activities are ineluctably embedded in
>      a larger context of ignorance--- that we don't know what
>      we're talking about.
>
>     "So, what to do, how to go on being engaged in a human world
>      we don't understand--and, if I'm on to something, we won't
>      understand?
>
>     "Here are eight ways I find helpful that respond to the fact
>      of our ignorance. Perhaps they may be helpful for you. I
>      hope so! (In spite of speaking assertively, I hope it's
>      clear that I include myself among those who don't know what
>      they're talking about!) These aren't in any particular
>      order, though I think the sequence they are in adds a
>      certain coherence .
>
>     "The first is to recognize that, given our neurology, our
>      shaping through evolutionary processes, we are,
>      unavoidably, seekers of meaning.  Recognizing that we are
>      seekers of meaning, we also need to recognize that,
>      unavoidably, we live in illusions, socially and
>      biologically created constructed worlds, nevertheless
>      personally necessary.  I'm not implying that we can live
>      outside of these constraints, but we need to be self
>      conscious about the fact that we do live in illusions and
>      there is no way for humans, to avoid this. So, each of us
>      needs to be self-conscious about our deep need for there to
>      be an elephant and for someone to tell us there really is
>      an elephant. ( Lots of authors and publisher thrive on that
>      need)
>
>     "Second, it seems essential to acknowledge, our
>      vulnerability, our finiteness.  This starts with our selves
>      and extends to our projects.  Thus we will be unavoidably
>      ignorant, uninformed about the outcomes --the consequences
>      of the consequences of what we do.
>
>     "Third, as all the great religious traditions emphasize, we
>      should seek to live in poverty.  Not material poverty but
>      rather to be poor in pride and arrogance and in the
>      conviction that I/we know what is right and wrong, what
>      must be done, and how to do it.  Nevertheless we must act -
>      - not acting is also to act -- regardless of our
>      vulnerability and finiteness.
>
>     "Thus, my fourth suggestion: that one or a group acts in the
>      spirit of hope.  Hope, not optimism.  Here I draw on the
>      insight of Rollo May.  As he put it, optimism and pessimism
>      are conditions of the stomach, of the gut. Their purpose is
>      to make us feel good or bad.  Whereas hope has to do with
>      looking directly at the circumstances we're dealing with,
>      at the challenges we must accept as finite, at vulnerable
>      beings and activities, recognizing the limits of our very
>      interpretation of what we're committing ourselves to, and
>      still go on because one hopes that one can make a
>      difference in the face of all that stands in the way of
>      making a difference.
>
>     "Fifth, this means one acts according to what I've been
>      calling 'tentative commitment'.  Tentative commitment means
>      you' are willing to look at the situation carefully enough,
>      to risk enough, to contribute enough effort, to hope enough,
>      to undertake your project.  And to recognize, given our
>      vulnerability our finiteness, our fundamental ignorance --
>      we may well have it wrong.  We may have to back off.  We
>      may have to change not only how we're doing it, but doing
>      it at all. And then do so!  Tentative commitment becomes an
>      essential individual and group condition for engaging a
>      world where we don't know what we are talking about.
>
>     "Suggestion six, then, is to be 'context alert' as a moral,
>      and operational necessity. Among other things, this carries
>      a very radical implication, given the current hype about
>      the information society that promises to put us in touch
>      with practically infinite amounts of information. That is,
>      if you are context alert you can only be deeply
>      understanding of very few things.  Because it takes time to
>      and effort to dig and to check and to deal with other
>      people who have different value priorities . This means
>      there are only a few things that you can be up on at any
>      given time.  But this is a very serious unsolved, indeed
>      unformulated, challenge for effective participation in the
>      democratic process--whatever that might mean..
>
>     "Number seven: One must be a learner/teacher, a guide in the
>      wilderness. Be question-askers all the time, not answer
>      givers.
>
>     "Number eight again echoes the great religious traditions
>      (all of which recognized our essential ignorance): practice
>      compassion. Given the circumstances I have described,
>      facing life requires all the compassion we can bring to
>      others, as well as to ourselves. Be as self-conscious as
>      possible, as much of the time as possible, and thereby
>      recognize that we all live in illusion, we all live in
>      ignorance, we all search for and need meaning. We all need
>      help facing that reality and that help goes by the name of
>      practicing compassion.
>
>     "The blind must care for the blind."
> -------
>
> ========================================
> Posting to pcp-discuss@lanl.gov from "Norman K. McPhail"
<norm@socal.wanet.com>
>
========================================
Posting to pcp-discuss@lanl.gov from "Igor Tsigelny" <itsigeln@ucsd.edu>
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Tue Sep 12 2000 - 22:55:05 BST