So fab! 

Sent from my iPad

> On 30 Aug 2015, at 21:16, Harrison via OSList 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> There comes a moment here in Maine when the season turns. It is not a gentle, 
> creep up on you quietly, sort of thing. It is an all at once, very suddenly, 
> kind of thing. There is a change in the light, a different smell on the wind, 
> a chill on the air. Fall. It’s here. Ending. Beginning. Now.
>  
> A time of reflections.
>  
> It has taken me a lifetime of living. But. I have learned two things, or 
> maybe better, come to two conclusions. 1) All Systems are open. 2) All 
> systems are self organizing.
>  
> All Systems are Open is a complicated way of saying that everything is 
> connected, including all the things that aren’t really a “thing,” which we 
> don’t even know about. The net result is an infinite complexity which is 
> completely unthinkable. And what you can’t think, you surely can’t control. 
> So much for THAT vain hope.
>  
> All Systems are self Organizing -- I know of no way of actually proving this 
> one, but it does seem a natural concomitant of the first conclusion. If you 
> find yourself in an infinitely complex and interconnected environment, where 
> nobody is, or can be, in control, such systems as are there, must have pretty 
> well gotten themselves together all by themselves. Of course there are a 
> number of people who are sure that God did it, and personally I don’t have 
> any real problem with that. But ascribing it all to divine agency doesn’t 
> help us very much. We still don’t have much control and the systems around 
> us, including those we think we organized, have a source other than our 
> selves. 
>  
> Life under the conditions described above (Open, Self Organizing Systems) can 
> seem a little peculiar to some people, but it is not so much irrational as 
> different. Certain “strange” things always seem to happen. For example, 
> Whoever comes are the right people, whatever happens is the only thing that 
> could have, wherever it happens is the right place, whenever it happens is 
> the right time, and when it is over it is over. Always works out  that way, 
> so I’ve found.
>  
> All this appears conducive to a very passive existence. Not much for us to 
> do. And the truth of the matter is that doing less always seems to accomplish 
> a great deal more. That said, there is one thing that we really have to do. 
> Follow the Law of Two Feet! Strange sort of law which says – If ever you find 
> yourself in a situation in which you are neither learning or contributing, 
> you must move your two feet until you find yourself a new place where you can 
> do the one, the other, or preferably, both. In a few words: Follow your 
> passion and take responsibility for it.
>  
> It took 80 years. Fun!
>  
> Harrison
>  
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