I might be misinterpreting, but Dave Snowden at about 1 hour 16 mins 30 secs in states "No religion in the world gives you a mission statement". I am not religious, I am a huge fan of Dave Snowden and love his provocative and disruptive thinking but how does he interpret the 10 commandments in Christianity, or the noble eightfold path in Buddhism if not as a mission or purpose statement?
Late to the party, but my 2 cents: your examples of 10 commandments / eightfold path are to me more like principles / practices or a future state of being/working but not a mission/vision. To you what would be the goal of Christianity? Would that be your goal or the pope's?
You're right Mike - I find it the most challenging aspect of Dave's message. It's reminiscent of the Buddhist injunction to burn your goals. A tough pill to swallow. It's one of the reasons why I asked Dave whether he has been inspired by any spiritual sources. As I see it, it is very much a spiritual message to live only in the present, or in Dave's word's to connect to 'the evolutionary potential of the present'.
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The video against Systems Thinking/Dynamics mentioned in minute 58 is probably this one: Dave Snowden and Bruce Waltuck, 11min ruclips.net/video/SecmDVtnHA0/видео.html
I had to laugh at the sentence "It's not understanding narratives, it's understanding patterns in self interpreted micro natatives. That's very different." I suspect Dave Snowden holds the answers and insights to many of the things I care about. Unfortunately, I have no way of understanding him.
Yes, he certainly speaks in obscure terms sometimes. I see what he's saying as, he's less interested in the stories that people tell, and more interested in how people relate to those stories. E.g. is this a story about control, or about loss, or about creativity? By understanding that you can get deeper insight into a culture.
I might be misinterpreting, but Dave Snowden at about 1 hour 16 mins 30 secs in states "No religion in the world gives you a mission statement". I am not religious, I am a huge fan of Dave Snowden and love his provocative and disruptive thinking but how does he interpret the 10 commandments in Christianity, or the noble eightfold path in Buddhism if not as a mission or purpose statement?
Late to the party, but my 2 cents: your examples of 10 commandments / eightfold path are to me more like principles / practices or a future state of being/working but not a mission/vision. To you what would be the goal of Christianity? Would that be your goal or the pope's?
37:21 - 37:37 a much bigger bomb shell for a lot of people's thinking that the brevity suggests.
You're right Mike - I find it the most challenging aspect of Dave's message. It's reminiscent of the Buddhist injunction to burn your goals. A tough pill to swallow.
It's one of the reasons why I asked Dave whether he has been inspired by any spiritual sources. As I see it, it is very much a spiritual message to live only in the present, or in Dave's word's to connect to 'the evolutionary potential of the present'.
▶ We're sponsored by the coaching practice FirstHuman. Cause breakthrough results for your business or team in three months - sign them up here: www.firsthuman.com/leadership-programme/
The video against Systems Thinking/Dynamics mentioned in minute 58 is probably this one:
Dave Snowden and Bruce Waltuck, 11min
ruclips.net/video/SecmDVtnHA0/видео.html
I had to laugh at the sentence "It's not understanding narratives, it's understanding patterns in self interpreted micro natatives. That's very different." I suspect Dave Snowden holds the answers and insights to many of the things I care about. Unfortunately, I have no way of understanding him.
Yes, he certainly speaks in obscure terms sometimes. I see what he's saying as, he's less interested in the stories that people tell, and more interested in how people relate to those stories. E.g. is this a story about control, or about loss, or about creativity? By understanding that you can get deeper insight into a culture.
Who is Stacy?
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_D._Stacey
@@BeingHumanPodcast For more on Stacey, check out episode 13 with Chris Mowles, a Stacey collaborator: ruclips.net/video/1kee2qlvs1g/видео.html