Difference between revisions of "WJR Thread"

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   <div class="col-md-3"><h2>What's written on the poster</h2></div>
 
   <div class="col-md-3"><h2>What's written on the poster</h2></div>
   <div class="col-md-6"><h3>Norbert Wiener</h3></div>
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   <div class="col-md-6"><h3>Norbert Wiener</h3>
 
<p>Setting the stage for the buddying systems movement, in his seminal 1948 Cybernetics, Wiener observed that our communication or societal "feedback" is broken. And that we must restructure it, and other systems, by (as we may say this today) innovating systemically (applying systemic insights – how the structure of a system might drive its behavior).</p>
 
<p>Setting the stage for the buddying systems movement, in his seminal 1948 Cybernetics, Wiener observed that our communication or societal "feedback" is broken. And that we must restructure it, and other systems, by (as we may say this today) innovating systemically (applying systemic insights – how the structure of a system might drive its behavior).</p>
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<div class="col-md-6"><h3>Erich Jantsch</h3>
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<p>Having given the opening keynote at the inaugural meeting of The Club of Rome, in 1968, where it was understood that "the world problematique" must be understood and treated systemically, Erich Jantsch organized some of the leading systems scientists to draft an action plan – which he then developed further and submitted to the MIT for implementation.</p>
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<div class="col-md-6"><h3>Ronald Reagan</h3>
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<p>In 1980 Jantsch passed away, aged 51, without having achieved his goals, or even being accepted on a permanent post at the UC Berkeley where he was sporadically working. In that same year Ronald Reagan became the 40th U.S. President on the agenda “we can only trust the market” …</p>
 
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=== Erich Jantsch ===
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Having given the opening keynote at the inaugural meeting of The Club of Rome, in 1968, where it was understood that "the world problematique" must be understood and treated systemically, Erich Jantsch organized some of the leading systems scientists to draft an action plan – which he then developed further and submitted to the MIT for implementation.
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  <div class="col-md-3"><h2>Conclusions</h2></div>
 
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=== Ronald Reagan ===
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<p>Wiener's paradox – we do not communicate! See also Gates, Ajkic, etc.</p>
In 1980 Jantsch passed away, aged 51, without having achieved his goals, or even being accepted on a permanent post at the UC Berkeley where he was sporadically working. In that same year Ronald Reagan became the 40th U.S. President on the agenda "we can only trust the market"...
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=== Conclusions ===
 
Wiener's paradox – we do not communicate! See also Gates, Ajkic, etc.
 
  
 
=== What additional information we may provide ===
 
=== What additional information we may provide ===
 
T.B.A.
 
T.B.A.

Revision as of 09:07, 12 June 2018

Innovation Etc. (copy)

What's written on the poster

Norbert Wiener

Setting the stage for the buddying systems movement, in his seminal 1948 Cybernetics, Wiener observed that our communication or societal "feedback" is broken. And that we must restructure it, and other systems, by (as we may say this today) innovating systemically (applying systemic insights – how the structure of a system might drive its behavior).

Erich Jantsch

Having given the opening keynote at the inaugural meeting of The Club of Rome, in 1968, where it was understood that "the world problematique" must be understood and treated systemically, Erich Jantsch organized some of the leading systems scientists to draft an action plan – which he then developed further and submitted to the MIT for implementation.

Ronald Reagan

In 1980 Jantsch passed away, aged 51, without having achieved his goals, or even being accepted on a permanent post at the UC Berkeley where he was sporadically working. In that same year Ronald Reagan became the 40th U.S. President on the agenda “we can only trust the market” …


Conclusions

Wiener's paradox – we do not communicate! See also Gates, Ajkic, etc.


What additional information we may provide

T.B.A.