Systems realities emerge out of interaction. To understand them, you don't look to the parts but rather the interaction between those parts. The space between parts that defines those parts could be referred to as fields, markets, or dialogue.
Here's something Einstein wrote that I think can be adapted for use in multiple spaces.
"A new concept appeared in physics,
the most important invention since Newton's time: the field. It needed great
scientific imagination to realize that it is not the charges nor the particles
but the field in the space between the charges and the particles that is
essential for the description of physical phenomena."*
I wonder if this insight could be simply
changed to describe economics, like this.
"A new concept appeared in economics:
the market. It needed great imagination to realize that it is not the institutions nor
the individuals in them but the field in the space
between institutions and individuals that is
essential for the description of economic phenomena."
Or perhaps society could be defined like this.
“A new concept appeared in sociology:
dialogue. It required great imagination to realize that it is not society or
the individuals in it but the dialogue in the space between society and
individuals that is essential for description of social phenomena.”
Individuals define their society and the way they interact but of
course society defines individuals. You’ll never understand either without
understanding both. Or perhaps more importantly, without understanding the relationship
between the two.
This is one reason that it’s so important for people to be heard.
You can’t define a relationship without a dialogue. Monologues simply broadcast
the status quo; dialogues involve both parties and allow for a change in the
relationship. Given society can’t change without change from individuals and individuals
can’t change without change from society, the first step to changing this relationship
is a dialogue about it. Shut people up, shut them down, and nothing changes.
Silence is a loud vote for the status quo.
*Albert Einstein, quoted p. 92 of Walter Isaacson's Einstein: His Life and Universe, Simon & Schuster, New York, NY 2007.
Paraphrasing and expanding upon Einstein? Pretty good choice.
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