title:16.5 Cycles of winning and losing
1. Striving for the "win-win" solution: win mania
Union des Associations Internationales
1. Striving for the "win-win" solution: win mania
1. Entropic crisis
1. Need for concrete examples: crop rotation
The difficulty in exploring patterns of alternation is the seeming lack of concrete (as opposed to abstract) examples by which the credibility of such patterns in practice may become apparent. The rotation of agricultural crops is therefore and interesting "earthy" practice to explore in the light of the mind-set which it has required of farmers for several thousand years.
1. Comprehending transformation
1. Dissonant harmony and holistic resonance
As Attali has shown (1977), music remains one of the clearest domains in terms of which the thinking underlying any social order can be discussed. It provides a more concretely accessible language with which to comprehend the subtleties and distinctions reviewed in the previous entries. Thus the composer Dane Rudhyar, in a study of spatialization of tone experience, confronts the basic duality of those entries:
This section provides commentaries on patterns of alternation related to the Global Strategies and Solutions area of the Encyclopedia of World Problems and Human Potential
Related Sections
1. Towards a synthesis
1. Ignorance and non-comprehension
1. Health as integration
1. Illusion of fragmentation
As a theoretical physicist, David Bohm is concerned with the illusory nature of fragmentation (1971, 1976) and the manner in which distinct fragments emerge from wholeness in movement (1980). He sees the perceptual problems with which he deals as being as relevant to a more healthy response to psychosocial fragmentation as to the problems of fundamental physics. The value of Bohm's perspective for understanding healthy individual development has in fact been recently stressed by a physician Larry Dossey (Note 15.3).