This post is about “safe-fail experiments.” The essential idea in safe-fail experiments was expressed well by Dave Snowden in this way: “I can afford them to fail and critically, I plan them so that through that failure I learn more about the terrain through which I wish to travel.” And again, in another place, […]
Some Comments on Safe-Fail Experiments
May 30th, 2008 · 8 Comments
Tags: Complexity · Epistemology/Ontology/Value Theory · Knowledge Making · Knowledge Management
On Cynefin as a Sensemaking Framework: Part Three
May 29th, 2008 · Comments Off on On Cynefin as a Sensemaking Framework: Part Three
There are three interesting questions we’d like to take up in this part. — First, assuming that the approach taken by Cynefin, requiring sensemaking through first selecting the context type one is dealing with is appropriate, is the Cynefin framework complete enough as it stands or does it fail to identify important types of […]
Tags: Complexity · Epistemology/Ontology/Value Theory · KM Software Tools · Knowledge Making · Knowledge Management
On Cynefin as a Sensemaking Framework: Part One
May 29th, 2008 · Comments Off on On Cynefin as a Sensemaking Framework: Part One
In earlier posts, I discussed Dave Snowden’s Cynefin framework from the viewpoint of systems classification, offered an alternative to it, and then offered some critical comments. I did this because (a) Dave sometimes used the term “system” in describing one or another Cynefin “domain” and (b) a lot of the recent discussion on Cynefin […]
Tags: Complexity · Epistemology/Ontology/Value Theory · KM Software Tools · Knowledge Making · Knowledge Management
On Classifying “Systems:” Part Two
May 9th, 2008 · Comments Off on On Classifying “Systems:” Part Two
Types of Systems The very circumscribed and also very partial and incomplete take on the history of General Systems Theory I provided in my last post, leaves us in the following position with respect to the problem of classifying systems. There are three very important dichotomies which have emerged out of the history of General […]
Tags: Complexity · Epistemology/Ontology/Value Theory · Knowledge Management
On Classifying “Systems:” Part One
May 9th, 2008 · Comments Off on On Classifying “Systems:” Part One
Introduction One of the aspects of Dave Snowden’s Cynefin approach is the identification of three physical and five human “domains,” or “systems.” The physical systems are called “order,” “chaos,” and “complexity.” In the area of human systems Dave breaks “order” down into known (simple) and knowable (complicated) systems, and also adds a fifth “domain” […]
Tags: Complexity · Epistemology/Ontology/Value Theory · Knowledge Making · Knowledge Management
Potpourri: Categories and Other Issues
April 21st, 2008 · Comments Off on Potpourri: Categories and Other Issues
This is my second blog entry commenting on Dave Snowden’s “Wave-particle duality” piece. My first reply addressed the strawman, knowledge as thing and flow, and paradox issues. This one will address the other six issues he raised. Once again, they are: 1. “If you think in categories, then the world is presented in categories or […]
Tags: Complexity · Epistemology/Ontology/Value Theory · KM Techniques · Knowledge Integration · Knowledge Making · Knowledge Management
Is There a Correct Interpretation of Hamlet?
April 17th, 2008 · Comments Off on Is There a Correct Interpretation of Hamlet?
Turner’s Evening of the Deluge (1843) In a recent blog entry, Dave Snowden, commented on a statement I made in an exchange in the actkm.org list serv group. Here’s the quotation from my post: “I do believe that there is a “correct” interpretation of Hamlet, and also that we can select among interpretations and find […]
Tags: Epistemology/Ontology/Value Theory · Knowledge Making · Knowledge Management