Friday, May 23, 2008

10 theories of social change

From San Francisco, PZ sends another way to look at the concepts that shape our world (re: the May 20 post: Shakespeare’s world and ours). This is from the Truthout.org website and looks at the big concepts that govern our view of what drives social change. 
Why Change Happens: Ten Theories
Tuesday 13 May 2008
by: Sara Robinson, The Campaign for America's Future

One of the grandest - and most frustrating - things about carrying on the great democratic conversation via blog is finding out how many of your fellow citizens (including many who are nominally on your side) turn out to be looking at the world from a completely different set of assumptions than you are. In fact, there's simply nothing like the Internet if you want to be thrown together with people who have ordered their entire lives around fundamental propositions that would never have occurred to you if you lived to be 100. Behold your fellow earthlings, in all their bizarre and twisted glory....

A lot of these disconnects have to do with all the weird and wonderful theories people have about why change happens. Because we each have our own pet theories of how the world works, different people can look at the same situation, and come to completely different conclusions about what's likely to happen next. Since these often unspoken understandings are among the things futurists are trained to look for, I thought I'd offer a short taxonomy of the various assumptions people bring to their thinking about what drives social change.
See the 10 theories at www.truthout.org/article/why-change-happens-ten-theories.

No comments: