It was Ronald Regan in the 1960s.

 

Gus Koehler, PhD., CEO 


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From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Tom Johnson
Sent: Tuesday, April 14, 2009 11:58 AM
To: [email protected]; The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee
Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Complexity and Institutional Philanthropy

 

Examples of public administrators and policy makers of measuring and
defining "tipping point" successfully and then taking positive action,
please?  

Perhaps I'm too pessimistic, but I recall more failures than successes.
e.g. In the '50s, when urban planners apparently decided some cities had
passed the tipping point on SOR (single occupancy residences: flop houses)
and ordered them razed in San Franciso's South of Market neighborhood and
in downtown St. Louis.  The result: a whole lot of poor people literally put
on the streets.  Or in the '70s when Calif. gov Jerry Brown decided there
were too many people in mental hospitals, so he ordered them closed.
Result: more incapable people dumped to the streets.

I think Pamela is right about Complexity in this century, but the concept
has a ways to go before it reaches general understanding by the public and
or public administrators.  So we must keep on keeping on.

-tom

On Tue, Apr 14, 2009 at 12:33 PM, Nicholas Thompson
<[email protected]> wrote:

Pamela, 

 

By applying money at the tipping point, we guide society toward favorable
attractors and away from unfavorable ones.  

 

Nick 

 

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Ethology, 

Clark University ([email protected])

http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/
<http://home.earthlink.net/%7Enickthompson/naturaldesigns/> 

 

 

 

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Pamela McCorduck <mailto:[email protected]>  

To: The <mailto:[email protected]>  Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee
Group

Sent: 4/14/2009 9:15:21 AM 

Subject: [FRIAM] Complexity and Institutional Philanthropy

 

In a talk with an historian of philanthropy the other day, he told me how
early 20th century philanthropy was driven by a metaphor derived from the
germ theory of disease, very new and exciting just then. Thus the most
forward-thinking philanthropists expressed ambitions to "cure" evil at its
source; to "cure social ills," to get at root causes, to prevent the spread
of social ills. 

 

In the early 21st century, surely the right metaphor is complexity. How
would such a metaphor be applied? How would institutional philanthropy
organize itself to take advantage of what we now know about complex systems?

 

Pamela

 

 

 

 

"To measure the abundance of positrons in cosmic rays, the team used data
from the instrument  <http://pamela.roma2.infn.it/index.php> PAMELA (Payload
for Antimatter Matter Exploration and Light-nuclei Astrophysics), which
launched aboard a Russian satellite in June 2006. Unlike previous
antimatter-hunting instruments, PAMELA can pinpoint not just the type of
incoming particle but also its energy."

 

WIRED Science

 


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-- 
==========================================
J. T. Johnson
Institute for Analytic Journalism -- Santa Fe, NM USA
www.analyticjournalism.com
505.577.6482(c)                                    505.473.9646(h)
http://www.jtjohnson.com                 [email protected]

"You never change things by fighting the existing reality.
To change something, build a new model that makes the
existing model obsolete."
-- Buckminster Fuller
==========================================

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