Generative & Nurturing Protagonist1 #120143 Shifting from a mechanical paradigm to a living system paradigm, from a finite game to an infinite game, from a linear approach to a cycle approach, from survival and sustainability to nurturing and thrivability... |
Regenerating and replenishing the commons as well. |
+Citations (4)
- CitationsAdd new citationList by: CiterankMapLink[3] The Gardens of Democracy: A New American Story of Citizenship, the Economy, and the Role of Government
Author: Liu Eric, Hanauer Nick - An investigation by the Systems Thinking World LinkedIn group conducted on Debategraph Cited by: Helene Finidori 2:17 PM 6 January 2012 GMT URL:
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Excerpt / Summary Effective gardening requires the right setting: fertile soil, good light, water. It requires a strong view as to what should and should not be grown. It requires a loving willingness to tend constantly, to fertilize and nurture what we seed. It requires a hard-headed willingness to weed what does not belong. Great gardeners would never simply “let nature take its course.” They take responsibility for their gardens. Great gardeners assume change in weather and circumstance. They adapt. Great gardens are sustainable only with continuous investment and renewal. Great gardeners turn the soil and rotate the plantings. Human beings, it is said, originated in a garden. Perhaps this is why all of us understand so intuitively what it takes to be great gardeners.
The great challenge of this age--and the point of this book--is to rethink how we as citizens create change, how the economy really works, and what government is fundamentally for. The great challenge of this age is to change how we see, and by doing, improve our ability to adapt.
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