Reintroducing Pierre Teilhard de Chardin to Modern Evolutionary Science

cxdig's avatarComplexity Digest

David Sloan Wilson

Pierre Teilhard Chardin (1881-1955) developed an evolutionary worldview that was both spiritual and consistent with the scientific knowledge of his day. He has been largely forgotten by modern evolutionary scientists but remains widely read by those who are inspired by his vision of conscious evolution leading to a planetary superorganism. This working paper examines the major tenets of Teilhard’s vision from a modern evolutionary perspective in an effort to integrate “hard” evolutionary science with conscious efforts to manage cultural change.

Read the full article at: humanenergy.io

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Systems Innovation Conference London, 13-14 May 2022

A global gathering for systems innovators…  Si Conference  London PAST CONFERENCE What  Si London Conference will be a unique 2 day event bringing together a diverse community of systems thinkers, systems changers and innovators When The event will take place in person in London UK, for two full days on May Friday 13th and Saturday 14th, 2022

Systems Innovation Platform

The 6 tensions between design and management / David Dunne / Circle #06 by Service Design Show

The 6 tensions between design and management / David Dunne / Circle #06 Service Design Show

The 6 tensions between design and management / David Dunne / Circle #06 by Service Design Show

Nice gentle systems thinking in the above.

The Service Design show has had some very good guests recently, see

Thinking Transversally – American Society for Cybernetics, Sun, Feb 20, 2022 at 12:00 PM EST

FEB 20 Thinking Transversally by American Society for Cybernetics

Thinking Transversally Tickets, Sun, Feb 20, 2022 at 12:00 PM | Eventbrite

Competence in Complexity – IFF Academy – May 2022-May 2023

source:

Competence in Complexity
IFF Academy
Competence in Complexity
 The Competence in Complexity programme offers a year-long process for participants to develop their 21st century competencies and to demonstrate them in practice in effective, transformative action.  Download: details of next Programme
May 2022 – May 2023
 The programme is hosted in our online Atelier space, a dedicated virtual space for participants to connect, converse, share and access materials, resources and insights and to remain ‘on campus’ throughout in a dedicated community of practice.   All workshops in the programme are conducted online to allow for international participation.   The curriculum is designed around three modules (see graphic).  Each is designed to be a valuable and rounded experience in itself.  We recommend, however, that participants take the full programme in order to gain maximum benefit from a supported learning environment designed for slow, substantial growth and development over the course of a full year.  

more info: Competence in Complexity

Competence in Complexity

pdf:

Cybernetics of Kindness:

Harish's avatarHarish's Notebook - My notes... Lean, Cybernetics, Quality & Data Science.

In today’s post, I am looking at the Socrates of Cybernetics, Heinz von Foerster’s ethical imperative:

“Always act so as to increase the number of choices.”

I see this as the recursive humanist commandment. This is very much applicable to ethics, and how we should treat each other. Von forester said the following about ethics:

Whenever we speak about something that has to do with ethics, the other is involved. If I live alone in the jungle or in the desert, the problem of ethics does not exist. It only comes to exist through our being together. Only our togetherness, our being together, gives rise to the question, How do I behave toward the other so that we can really always be one?

Von Foerster views align with that of constructivism, the idea that we construct our knowledge about our reality. We construct our knowledge to“re-cognize” a reality through…

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2022 Critical Social Ontology Workshop Program | Powers, Capacities & Dispositions – 5-6 March 2022, free

2022 Critical Social Ontology Workshop Program Posted on January 28, 2022 by rgroff2013 Conference will be free, but you’ll need to register. Details coming shortly. For now, e-mail ruth groff slu.edu to express your interest.

2022 Critical Social Ontology Workshop Program | Powers, Capacities & Dispositions

CECAN Webinar: Evaluating government spending: Findings and recommendations from the latest National Audit Office report, 15 Match 1-2pm

Evaluating government spending: Findings and recommendations from the latest National Audit Office report   Tuesday 15th March 2022, 13:00 – 14:00 GMT

CECAN Webinar: Evaluating government spending: Findings and recommendations from the latest National Audit Office report
Evaluating government spending: Findings and recommendations from the latest National Audit Office report
 Tuesday 15th March 2022, 13:00 – 14:00 GMT

Presenter: Phil Bradburn, National Audit Office
You are warmly invited to join us for the following CECAN Webinar…
Webinar Overview: At the National Audit Office (NAO), we believe good evaluation is key to helping government to learn whether its interventions are working and to demonstrate accountability for the use of public money.Our 2021 report Evaluating Government Spending finds that Government has recently taken steps to strengthen the way it evaluates its activity, but evaluation continues to be variable and inconsistent. Much of its work is either not evaluated robustly or not evaluated at all, which means government has little information in most policy areas on what difference is made by the billions of pounds being spent.Hear from the NAO on:the actions we found that government has taken since our previous report on evaluation in 2013;progress in addressing systemic barriers to good evaluation and good use of evaluation evidence; andWhat further steps the centre of government should take to build on their reforms to date.Presenter Biography: Phil Bradburn has built and coordinated the National Audit Office’s central analysis capability since 2010. He is an expert in identifying how methods can be applied to provide audit insights. His previous experience is in economics and analysis, working in government on transport, housing and strategy. He was part of the team that produced NAO’s 2021 Evaluating Government Spending report, and their previous 2013 report Evaluation in Government.

CSCS Seminar Presents Feb. 15: “Markov genealogy processes for exact phylodynamic inference” 1st Hybrid Seminar!! (since…a while)

Markov genealogy processes for exact phylodynamic inference A Hybrid(!!) Complex Systems Seminar Room 747 Weiser Hall and ZOOM (link below)      Aaron King UM Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Center for the Study of Complex Systems Tuesday, February 15, 2022 11:30AM EST

CSCS Seminar Presents Feb. 15: “Markov genealogy processes for exact phylodynamic inference” 1st Hybrid Seminar!! (since…a while)

How the CIA Destroyed the Socialist Internet: Cybersyn, Part 1 | Kernel Panic | Mashable – YouTube

source:

How the CIA Destroyed the Socialist Internet: Cybersyn, Part 1 | Kernel Panic | Mashable – YouTube

How the CIA Destroyed the Socialist Internet: Cybersyn, Part 1 | Kernel Panic | Mashable

1,459 views11 Feb 202240DISLIKESHAREDOWNLOADSAVEMashable1.12M subscribersSUBSCRIBEDIn the 1970s, the US government and a group of universities were working on the fastest possible way to connect unwieldy mainframe computers separated by thousands of miles. Their work, the ARPANET, would become the basis for the modern internet. The networks we now depend on still reflect the purpose and worldview of its time and place: open, uncontrolled, and uncontrollable. But there is another story. A hemisphere away, a group of programmers in Santiago, Chile were building a network of their own. Project Cybersyn had a purpose, ethos, and design completely different from the American network. In the two brief years it lasted, Cybersyn’s creators saw the shape of something unique, something that was lost before we ever really learned what it could have meant to a networked world.

How the CIA Destroyed the Socialist Internet: Cybersyn, Part 1 | Kernel Panic | Mashable

How the CIA Destroyed the Socialist Internet: Cybersyn, Part 1 | Kernel Panic | Mashable – YouTube

How to Live in The Future Part 4: The Future is Exapted/Remixed | by Michael Garfield | Medium

Michael Garfield Mar 25, 2017 · 10 min read · Listen How to Live in The Future Part 4: The Future is Exapted/Remixed

How to Live in The Future Part 4: The Future is Exapted/Remixed | by Michael Garfield | Medium

Systemogenesis as a General Regulator of Brain Development – Anokhin (1964)

Systemogenesis as a General Regulator of Brain Development Author links open overlay panel

P.K.Anokhin

Systemogenesis as a General Regulator of Brain Development – ScienceDirect

Systemogenesis as a General Regulator of Brain Development

Author links open overlay panelP.K.AnokhinShow moreAdd to MendeleyShareCite

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0079-6123(08)63131-3Get rights and content

Publisher Summary

The data collected in the laboratories over a number of years gives an opportunity to suggest that systemogenesis is a real regulator of the development of the brain structures and functions. The development goes on all the time selectively and is accelerated in accordance with the earliest needed adaptation to the outside surroundings by the newborn animal. It is seen that the well-timed consolidation of the vitally needed functional systems of the organism is continuously monitored by the systemic initial arrangement, the growth, and consolidation of the components of the functional system. It is also seen that this heterochronic maturation of different components of the functional system takes place everywhere, including the finest organizations on the level of molecular combinations and in the processes of the selective and successive maturation of individual synaptic organizations, in particular, on the cortical level. It is true that the systemogenetic type of the maturation and the growth is the most marked for those functional systems of the organism, which must be mature exactly at the moment of birth. They are evidently inborn, the preparation for their consolidation is preformed, and in fact, in the process of the ontogenesis, they correspond demonstrably to the ecological factors of that species of animal. The combination of the components of later and finer organized functional systems on the basis of which different behavioral acts are formed is less easily demonstrated. In that case, maturation and formation of new synaptic organizations of the brain in the presence of the completely mature peripheral working apparatus begin to play a leading role.

pdf

https://www.sciencedirect.com.sci-hub.se/science/article/abs/pii/S0079612308631313

🌀🗞 The FLUX Review, Ep. 38 – 🌀🗞 The FLUX Review

🌀🗞 The FLUX Review, Ep. 38 February 10th, 2022 The FLUX Collective 9 hr ago 2 Morning Glory Pool, Yellowstone National Park // Photo: Neel Mehta, FLUX Episode 38 — February 10th, 2022 — Available at read.fluxcollective.org/p/38 Contributors to this issue: Ade Oshineye, Dimitri Glazkov, Erika Rice Scherpelz, Stefano Mazzocchi, Justin Quimby, Alex Komoroske, Boris Smus, Neel Mehta,  Robinson Eaton Additional insights from: Gordon Brander, a.r. Routh, Ben Mathes, Spencer Pitman We’re a ragtag band of systems thinkers who have been dedicating our early mornings to finding new lenses to help you make sense of the complex world we live in. This newsletter is a collection of patterns we’ve noticed in recent weeks. “To be soft is to be powerful” ― Rupi Kaur 🔬🔭 From problems to problem spaces We humans love to measure our usefulness by our problem-solving ability. Yet, in this complex world, the process of problem-solving alone rarely leads to closure. More often than not, an attempt to solve a given problem just produces another set of problems… some larger than the original. At first, these new problems might not register as actual problems. Over time they fester and grow, first just a nuisance, then nipping at our heels, and then, with a sudden phase transition, looming in front of us like the iceberg that sank the Titanic. An organization that celebrates itself as a problem-solving machine is likely at an earlier stage of its cultural evolution. Progress here is defined by solving more problems more quickly, without pausing to think whether today’s problem was caused by yesterday’s speedy solution. Words such as “impact” and “launch” are at the center of its vernacular.

🌀🗞 The FLUX Review, Ep. 38 – 🌀🗞 The FLUX Review

Webinar: Creating Patterns of Possibility – 3 March 2020 at 2pm GMT — The System Innovation Initiative, The Rockwool Foundation

Creating Patterns of Possibility March 3rd, 15:00 CET / 14:00 GMT / 9:00am ET Join us as Charles Leadbeater and Jennie Winhall outline new practical models for shifting systems by changing the pattern of relationships in conversation with practitioners with deep experience charting relational shifts which change systems.

Webinar: Creating Patterns of Possibility – March 3rd. — The System Innovation Initiative

Strategy in a Complex World, What’s the Point? – Discussion | Si Network – 24 February, 2pm GMT

Strategy in a Complex World, What’s the Point? – Discussion Thu, February 24 2:00pm – 3:00pm GMT

It is well known that complex adaptive systems are unamenable to traditional linear approaches to management and strategy. They consist of a wide array of actors acting, reacting, adapting, and evolving. International politics, cities, social networks, and communities are examples. However, the question is, does their somewhat uncontrollable and unpredictable nature render management and strategy irrelevant? Or is it simply that we need to reinvent our understanding and approach to strategy in light of a new recognition of the complexity of the organizations we inhabit and work with.

In this discussion between Orit Gal and Mark McCoy we will be unpacking this question and exploring if there can be strategy in a world of complexity what does it look like and how might we go about it. Orit Gal is the senior lecturer for strategy and complexity at Regents University London. Developer of the theory of Social Acupuncture she teaches a range of courses relating to the application of complexity theories to operational design, in areas such as innovation, social entrepreneurship, economic development, and conflict resolution.

This will be a 1-hour discussion hosted by the Si London Hub. The event will be a hybrid one with the interview streamed from our co-working  location with participants joining via Zoom. Date: 24th, 2 pm UK

Strategy in a Complex World, What’s the Point? – Discussion | Si Network

The link is to the Mighty Networks site – https://www.systemsinnovation.network/

It seems that you can also join directly at https://us06web.zoom.us/j/9926975973