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The art and science of the possible

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The art and science of the possible

Tag Archives: Foundational Thinkers

A significant update to my list of foundational thinkers: F. Buckmister Fuller

21 Friday Jun 2013

Posted by lnedelescu in business, capitalism, complexity, design thinking, future, human capital, society

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architecture, Buckmister Fuller, complexity, Design, Foundational Thinkers, specialization of labor vs. holism, Systems

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I have just come across the incarnation into words of a beautiful positivist and humanist mind of the highest caliber: F Buckminster Fuller. Apparently he is 50 years ahead of my timid attempts at using the converged wisdom of complexity, design and systems to contemplate our society’s potential pitfalls and ways to overcome them. And so, my initial list of foundational thinkers (Ackoff, Jaques, Prigogine and Vester) has just been expanded. I will be studying the implications of Fuller’s profound insights in the near future, but, for now, here is a quotation that takes the duality of my caution-opportunity message in the discontinuity disorder and post-causality pieces even further:

“We are in an age that assumes the narrowing trends of specialization to be logical, natural, and desirable. Consequently, society expects all earnestly responsible communication to be crisply brief. . . . In the meantime, humanity has been deprived of comprehensive understanding. Specialization has bred feelings of isolation, futility, and confusion in individuals. It has also resulted in the individual’s leaving responsibility for thinking and social action to others. Specialization breeds biases that ultimately aggregate as international and ideological discord, which, in turn, leads to war“. – F. Buckminster Fuller

And the nominees (for foundational thinking) are…

29 Monday Apr 2013

Posted by lnedelescu in management, taxonomy

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Ackoff, complexity, Foundational Thinkers, Human Organization, Jaques, Life, management, Ontology, Prigogine, Vester

vesterAckoff-triarchyPrigogine_6jacques_2

In a recent post I proposed a distinction between foundational thinkers and “how” teachers. While defining the generic concept, I did not give any concrete example of what I consider to be foundational thinkers. In this post, I introduce a select few. The selection criteria for these thinkers is the development of a complete and internally consistent paradigm related to life, human organization and management.

Russell Ackoff – for providing a complete ontology of the management practice and its pphilosophy,

Elliott Jaques – for providing a complete ontology for human organization,

Frederic Vester – for providing a complete bio-cybernetic model of complexity,

Ilya Prigogine – for the pursuit of the unification of natural and social sciences using complexity.

It is worth mentioning another trait these four shared: they were all iconoclastic personalities within their respective fields.

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