Harold, I take your point … but it does occur to me that We (whoever “we” is) 
are OSI – so we are just doing our “job.” J

 

ho

 

From: OSList [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Harold Shinsato via OSList
Sent: Tuesday, July 19, 2016 2:07 PM
To: Chris Corrigan; paul levy; World wide Open Space Technology email list
Subject: Re: [OSList] Renewing the Mission of the Open Space Institute U.S.

 

Hi Chris,

Since the thread is about helping the OSI-US find "mission questions", rather 
than answering the questions, I would encourage and invite you to reflect on 
these questions in separate threads to make the reflections easier to see and 
connect with via the subject line.

I look forward to your reflections!

    Thanks!
    Harold

On 7/19/16 11:13 AM, Chris Corrigan wrote:

I like your questions Paul. They’re interesting! Can I add some reflections on 
them?  

 

On Jul 19, 2016, at 7:06 AM, paul levy via OSList 
<[email protected]> wrote:

 

Harold 

 

 A few more questions ...

 

Warm wishes 

 

Paul

 

 

Why are we still calling OST a technology ?

 

Still called a technology because it’s cheeky.  That’s my take anyway.

 

 

Why is the LAW of two feel a law ?

 

Law because, like the law of gravity it seems to be fundamentally inviolable. 
So it’s helpful to acknowledge it.  You could probably acknowledge the law of 
gravity too, if you wanted to remind people not to drop their stuff. But at 
least acknowledging the law of mobility helps people understand why folks 
wander off during sessions.





 

If the "principles" are not prescriptions but descriptions why are they called 
principles ?

 

 

Principles don’t have to be prescriptive to be principles.  These four 
principles seem to capture four things (or five) that work about open space.  
They are provocative and interesting and disruptive to normal meeting 
procedures.  And I have done many Open Space meetings without talking about 
them at all. 





How can it possibly take 2 days to "teach"

OST and why would anyone ever want to teach it anyway ?

 

 

It doesn’t take two days to “teach" Open Space Technology.  But to spend two 
days with other practitioners who are learning, thinking about, and trading 
ideas on using OST seems to accelerate people’s practice and use of the process 
and the underlying view of the world that it encapsulates.

 

Open Space Technology is not “teacheable” but it is learnable.  How’s that for 
a provocative proposition?





Why do OST "elders" on the OS list keep advocating dogmatic views about OST? 
(Oh yes you do)

 

 

Who are these “elders" of which you speak?

 





What if one less thing to do was facilitation ?

 

Yup.





 

How could OSI begin a humble inquiry into new and valuable ways of opening 
space? And learn from them ?

 

This is a really great question.  Juanita Brown has convened a conversation on 
“the central garden” of participatory methods that is just such a humble 
inquiry. So humble that it has been approached slowly and quietly, and I’m sure 
she would welcome many others joining.  She’s been at it for a while: 
http://www.theworldcafe.com/more-from-juanita-brown/




What questions do we need to ask that cannot be formed into latinised words and 
phrases ?

 

This one:

 

http://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/976/cpsprodpb/7FF2/production/_90345723_mediaitem90345722.jpg





 

Where is open space technology when the world needs to open space most - right 
now ?

 

 

It is right here where it has always been.   And I think there is a lot of 
space being opened in the world right now, in all kinds of ways. 

 

Opening space is not a guarantee of peace and good times. When space opens so 
too does authentic human voice. People that have been silent claim sound. 
People that have been displaced look for a new home. People that have been 
backed into corners clamp down on control and fear.  Does the world need open 
space most now? Or has open space given us the world we live in now?

 

We have no guarantee of safety in this world. And when space open for some, 
others who didn’t ever realize they were taking up so much, suddenly start 
getting quite worried.  It’s nice to imagine the tables being turned over, 
unless one of the tables is mine.  

 

Chris

 

 

 

-- 
Harold Shinsato
[email protected]
http://shinsato.com
twitter: @hajush <http://twitter.com/hajush> 

_______________________________________________
OSList mailing list
To post send emails to [email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]
To subscribe or manage your subscription click below:
http://lists.openspacetech.org/listinfo.cgi/oslist-openspacetech.org
Past archives can be viewed here: 
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]

Reply via email to