At 03:21 PM 11/27/00 -0500, you wrote:
>I am wondering if any of you out there on the list serve has ever
>facilitated an open space event where the participants themselves determine
>the principles/laws that will govern their open space event. 

Well that would certainly be something to experiment with -- but in the process 
it may be useful to recall how it was that the Four Principles and The Law of 
Two Feet came into being. Contrary to what it might seem -- given the names 
(principles and a law), neither the principles nor the Law emerged as a matter 
of design or  prescription, but rather as a result of observation by myself and 
many others over a period of years. Put more plainly -- both the principles and 
the law simply gave expression to what it appeared that people were doing 
anyhow. In short, they were  blinding flashes of the obvious. But if obvious, 
why state them? Good question. The reason I think was -- that all too often, 
particularly in Open Space, the obvious is overlooked. For example, when most 
people first hear about Open Space their eyes cloud over -- 'cause they know it 
simply couldn't happen. Then, of course, it does happen -- but by that time 
folks are having so much fun, that they can't remember ever having doubted. But 
it is very useful to remember that the group did what everybody knew to be 
impossible. For when folks do the impossible, that usually results in no small 
amount of empowerment. So anyhow, the four principles and the one law were 
intended simply as "guides along the way" -- or things to notice. 

Then one might ask if there were other things to be noticed? And doubtless 
there are -- and as a matter of practical fact, I have written four books 
trying to point some of them out. But God forbid that everybody be required to 
read (listen to) four books before entering into Open Space. They would never 
take the trip. All of which is to make the point, I think, that what is said at 
the beginning (the first 15 minutes) is not about completeness, but rather 
sufficiency -- And in this case, less is definitely more. The objective, after 
all, is not to give a full description of Open Space (or anything else) but 
rather to get the folks off an running.    


Harrison Owen
7808 River Falls Drive
Potomac, MD 20854 USA
phone 301-469-9269
fax 301-983-9314
Summer Phone 207-763-3261
Summer Address
189 Beaucaire Ave.
Camden, ME 04843
website www.mindspring.com/~owenhh
Open Space Institute website www.openspaceworld.org

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