I've been lately spending a lot of time on planes, and when you fly a lot,
you become acutely aware that air is actually a fluid medium, just one a lot
less dense than water.  So, yes, we open space in water.

*blurb!*

Chris

On 6/18/07, Scott Willard <[email protected]> wrote:

Ralph,
This was a really good find.  Thanks for spelling out.

If we go with the water principle then we may have to consider adding
another principle to OST, "clothing is optional."  I'm not ready for that,
yet;)

*Ralph Copleman <[email protected]>* wrote:

Hi,

I was paging through a book the other day called "Biomimicry" by Janine
Benyus, a science journalist.  From the back cover: "She introduces the
maverick researchers who are studying proteins to make blindingly fast
computers, discovering new drugs by observing what animals eat, and more."

Benyus identifies four "tricks of the trade" that nature employs when
making things.  The third one is "self-assembly".  That sounded to me a lot
like self-organization, and since I'm always on the lookout for analogies to
open space, I took a further look...


   1. ...nature's first trick of the trade is that nature manufactures
   its materials under life-friendly conditions – in water, at room
   temperature, without harsh chemicals or high pressures."  She's reflecting
   on the difference between nature and human industrial processes, but as I
   read between these lines with OS in mind, this was interesting.
   2. ..."ordered hierarchical structures" - by this she does NOT mean
   organizational pyramids.  She's referring to the added strength that comes
   from having multiple, connected bands of materials, as in steel bridge
   cables or human muscles and tendons.  These items are extra strong and
   resilient because they are many similar parts joined in function rather than
   one solid piece.  Think: humans sitting in a circle to address the same
   theme.
   3. ...self-assembly – nature "grows its materials from the ground
   up, not by building but by self-assembling."  Sounds like every OS meeting
   I've ever seen.
   4. "...the ability to customize materials through the use of
   templates" – She says most human industrial processes are "heat, beat, and
   treat" in their primary methodology and produce a lot of waste material.
    "...nature makes only what she wants and when she wants.  No waste on the
   cutting room floor."


This fourth one intrigues me.  It sounds like the community market place
to me and recalls to mind how every posted topic in an OS gathering
contributes something important to the overall collective consciousness and
ultimate sense of the meeting that is a form of final product.  No waste at
all.

I've always believed OS is the closest thing we have to humans behaving in
harmony with nature and evolution.  Now I'm more convinced then ever.

The only thing is that bit in the first item, where it implies nature
produces everything in water.  Does this mean we only open space in lakes or
pools from now on?

Ralph Copleman



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Scott Willard
Affinity Consulting Group
affinity-scottwillard.com

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--
CHRIS CORRIGAN
Facilitation - Training
Open Space Technology

Weblog: http://www.chriscorrigan.com/parkinglot
Site: http://www.chriscorrigan.com

Principal, Harvest Moon Consultants, Ltd.
http://www.harvestmoonconsultants.com

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