"Ever since the Industrial Revolution, Western society has benefited from science, logic, and reductionism over intuition and holism. Psychologically and politically we would much rather assume that the cause of a problem is “out there,” rather than “in here.” It’s almost irresistible to blame something or someone else, to shift responsibility away from ourselves, and to look for the control knob, the product, the pill, the technical fix that will make a problem go away. Serious problems have been solved by focusing on external agents – preventing smallpox, increasing food production, moving large weights and many people rapidly over long distances. Because they are embedded in larger systems, however, some of our “solutions” have created further problems. And some problems, those most rooted in the internal structure of complex systems, the real messes, have refused to go away. Hunger, poverty, environmental degradation, economic instability, unemployment, chronic disease, drug addiction, and war, for example, persist in spite of the analytical ability and technical brilliance that have been directed toward eradicating them. No one deliberately creates those problems, no one wants them to persist, but they persist nonetheless. That is because they are intrinsically systems problems – undesirable behaviors characteristic of the system structures that produce them. They will yield only as we reclaim our intuition, stop casting blame, see the system as the source of its own problems, and find the courage and wisdom to restructure it."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Educators from the United StatesEnvironmentalists from the United StatesWomen scientists from the United States
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Pages 3-4.
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Donella_Meadows
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Donella Meadows
Donella "Dana" Meadows (1941-2001) was a pioneering American environmental scientist, teacher and writer. She is best known as author of the influential book The Limits to Growth.
46 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Donella Meadows →
Related Quotes
"Pay attention to what is important, not just what is quantifiable."
"Expand the boundary of caring."
"Changing the length of a delay may utterly change behavior. [...] Overshoots, oscillations, and collapses are always …"
"If I could, I would add an Eleventh Commandment: Thou shalt not distort, delay, or sequester information."
"Don't be stopped by the "if you can't define it and measure it, I don't have to pay attention to it" ploy. No one can…"
"Seeing systems whole requires more than being "interdisciplinary," if that word means, as it usually does, putting to…"
"And finally, starting with history discourages the common and distracting tendency we all have to define a problem no…"
"Before you charge in to make things better, pay attention to the value of what's already there."
"Pretending you're in control even when you aren't is a recipe not only for mistakes, but for not learning from mistak…"
"Systems thinking can only tell us to do these things. It can't do them for us. And so we are brought to the gap betwe…"