On LinkedIn (first links), Jessie Lydia Henshaw says:
I’m very pleased to say my newest paper – “Emergent Growth of System Self-Organization & Self-Control,” – was published yesterday by SRBS (the systems research journal). https://lnkd.in/eHNiCCkv.
Sometimes, it’s the small turns that matter, such as from accelerating to decelerating, reversing the innovation directions from multiplying to coordinating, and giving birth to the biggest changes of all, like relieving growth crises and revealing new visions of naturally healthy futures.
It turns out nearly all people already know a great deal about timing the creative turn from multiplying the expansion of startup designs to perfecting them as they grow up to become well-working and lasting designs. The same strategy applies to any scale, for innovations, relationships, and even ways of life that go from rapid profit growth to peak profit as they mature to reach their full potential.
Our economic world is designed to maximize profit, too, but mainly the fast and immature kind, stuck in maximizing the growth of systems that overshoot their resilience to become disruptive and risk their own collapse. It made the work of our lives fast and sloppy just to please finance, not our futures.
Being out of touch with nature and unable to mature kept our world from reaching its full potential, as most responsive growth systems naturally do, responding to their own cohesion to mature their designs inside and out, like our own bodies and minds did to fulfill our individual potentials.
Post | LinkedIn
Paper https://synapse9.com/pub/2023_sys-SelfOrg&SelfControl.pdf