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As we learned in Part 1, it is never too late to get serious about the future of business and the society it serves. Problems and challenges continually abound, even where they once seemed solved. The historical record confirms my suspicions: This decade's solution is next year's problem. I remember one pleasant Florida evening back in 1977 discussing the future with Bud Parrish, a close friend and outstanding executive. We concluded that if the human race could make it through the 1980s without a nuclear nightmare, we would have it made. Life would finally become safe. We certainly were naive…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
As we learned in Part 1, it is never too late to get serious about the future of business and the society it serves. Problems and challenges continually abound, even where they once seemed solved. The historical record confirms my suspicions: This decade's solution is next year's problem. I remember one pleasant Florida evening back in 1977 discussing the future with Bud Parrish, a close friend and outstanding executive. We concluded that if the human race could make it through the 1980s without a nuclear nightmare, we would have it made. Life would finally become safe. We certainly were naive - no nuclear nightmare, and the world became a lot more dangerous anyway. While the world has obviously become more dangerous than ever, our national leaders just as obviously fail to grasp it all. In many cases, experts offer opinions as solutions while failing to remind the public that they simply do not know how to solve many of the world's current collection of problems. For experts and non-experts alike, the complexities of postmodern life are indeed unique. The fundamental problem for us today is that we have very little experience, if any, with solving the types of problems that urgently challenge us. Being a human being is difficult. We are paradoxical creatures - forward living and backward thinking. We talk about the future but know only the past. Today, many thought leaders talk about the paradigm shift. They argue that at the dawn of the 21st Century, executives require new models of business organization and styles of leadership to rekindle the hope of human progress. While some executives transform their enterprises into learning organizations via new models derived from the systems paradigm, others adopt the organic or biological perspective as the preferred metaphor for describing the human condition. Even the most cursory observer understands that "something is afoot," as Holmes would say. While interested persons encounter a flood of books on the new paradigm in business and society (about 20 a month), the lack of depth does not satisfy their curiosity in any essential way. The full scope of today's events is hidden behind a veil of blatant commercialism and under- conceptualism. Readers are is likely to remain ignorant about the critical points of the current paradigm shift and what it truly means to his or her life. As Phillips once observed, the reader may not be aware that the current discussions over the paradigm shift "are related to those over system theory, over organicism in biology and psychology, over structuralism and functionalism, and over internal relations in philosophy."