Michael,

What wonderful theater! I think I will steal that for my next open space!

    Harold

On 10/26/13 7:54 AM, Michael M Pannwitz wrote:
Well, Dan, if you feel commanded and directed, imperatively, by "Be prepared to be surprised" (In German: "Augen Auf! Mit Überraschungen ist zu rechnen!", even more gruesome), how do you feel being confronted by the Law? And by a facilitator raising his/her voice by saying, as the Law (in German: Das Gesetz) is introduced: "You know about Laws, they have to be obeyed...!!!", followed by the translation of the Law, theatrical pause and then, facilitator stops in his/her tracks (here I am talking of classical facilitators like me that walk the circle): "You honor a group with your absence when you neither learn nor contribute something. If you learn something, stay. If you contribute something, stay. If neither is happening you leave the group by whatever means are available to you and look for a more productive place for you to be in!"
Adding, "and this Law is in force right now!", pause.....
Somehow, I havent gotten the curve yet, when I introduce the admonition (yes, this is the name for it, in German: Ermahnung) and the Law... invariably participants smile or grin at me!! No respect for authority, let alone age or beauty, and this just at the very beginning of an open space event.

Have a great Sunday!!!
cheers
mmp


On 26.10.2013 15:17, Daniel Mezick wrote:
When responding to Jenifer's thoughts earlier, I realized:

The slogan "Be Prepared to Be Surprised" is a most interesting one in OST.

It is actually an illocutionary speech act.... of type "*/Directive/*".

So, located here in OST, baked into it, we have a specific slogan that
is attempting to *cause* the hearer to take a particular action, e.g. a
request, *commands* and advice. A directive!

I wonder if the undeniably directive structure of "Be Prepared to Be
Surprised" really aligned with the intention/spirit/philosophy of OST.

Dan


Background links:

What is a speech act?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speech_acts
A /*speech act*/ in linguistics
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistics> and the philosophy of
language <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophy_of_language> is an
utterance that has performative function in language and communication.

What is an illocutionary act?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illocutionary_act
*Illocutionary act* is a term in linguistics
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistics> introduced by the philosopher
John L. Austin <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_L._Austin> in his
investigation of the various aspects of speech acts
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speech_acts>.

What is a Directive illocutionary act?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illocutionary_act#Classes_of_illocutionary_acts
*directives* = speech acts that are to *cause the hearer to take a
particular action*, e.g. requests, commands and advice

More than you asked for:
What is a Commissive speech act?
*commissives* = speech acts that commit a speaker to some future action,
e.g. promises and oaths
















On 10/24/13 1:29 PM, Jenifer Toksvig wrote:
Re: [OSList] The OST Game Dan wrote: >> Consider the man who loves a
certain woman, and waits for the current trend of her interest in him
to change. He is goal seeking without controlling. Likewise,
trend-following market traders do not attempt to create, control or
make trends. They simply identify & ride them, while seeking wealth. <<

Waiting and seeking are still forms of controlling. Your loving man
has chosen to wait for his goal rather than (to coin a phrase) being
prepared to be surprised by another woman. He may not be trying to
control her, but he’s still trying to control the situation in a way
that he thinks will allow him to achieve his goal.

Those who seek wealth do likewise: they don’t randomly ride the
trends, they identify them and make choices about how to ride them, in
order to obtain wealth. That is control.

I don’t think it’s possible to be goal-oriented and try to exert some
kind of control over the process, unless your goal is… to have no
goal. Actually, even being prepared to be surprised is a goal. A sort
of wonderfully ridiculous one.

Jen x

*Jenifer Toksvig
*www.acompletelossforwords.com

*The Copenhagen Interpretation
*www.thecopenhageninterpretation.co.uk



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