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The art and science of the possible

~ A celebration of non-zero sum thinking

The art and science of the possible

Tag Archives: Common Sense

Tools are only as effective as the mindsets that employ them

13 Monday Jan 2014

Posted by lnedelescu in complexity, design thinking, Organizational Development, technology

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CES 2014, Common Sense, complexity, Design Thinking, Karl Popper, Network Theory, Organizational Development, Roger Martin, Technologization, Tools

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With the annual Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas attracting worldwide media coverage last week, let me be the one to posit that technological innovation is only as effective as our mental models are able to keep up.

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Common sense doesn’t discriminate between elites and the masses (thankfully!)

16 Wednesday Oct 2013

Posted by lnedelescu in business, capitalism, innovation, knowledge, management

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Common Sense, Knowledge, Quantity vs. Quality, wisdom

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One of Russell Ackoff’s corollaries which I intuitively subscribed to but had yet to put to the test was that knowledge is not necessarily synonymous to wisdom. This goes back to the essential argument that quantity of information crammed does not necessarily result in a qualitative leap in understanding. Today I got the opportunity to test the power of Ackoff’s insight in an environment long regarded as a beacon of knowledge: academia.

Sitting only yards away from a professor emeritus of management with a long list of academic accomplishments, I was dumbfounded to hear him lucidly argue that innovation is the biggest threat to mankind’s prosperity. He was referring to the 2007 financial meltdown but proceeded to generalize his argument outside of financial markets. His “solution”? Regulate innovation so we slow it down and ensure it doesn’t get ahead of our collective learning curve. Not even the most devout communist party leader would have dared proclaim something even close to this in the old USSR. Looking at the guy with a certain amount of compassion I realized that one can spend his or her life studying and yet manage to avoid common sense altogether. Now there is something encouraging and reassuring to this story: common sense doesn’t seem to discriminate between the elites and common folk. This is important because it means that wisdom of the crowds on which democracy depends is evenly bestowed on the population. I sincerely hope this gives those with titles, power and fame pause to think. We are in a serious global deficit of humility and the elites certainly seem to be the major driver!

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