integral approach: 5 basic components

51
Integral approach: 5 basic components

Upload: eugene-pustoshkin

Post on 25-Apr-2015

1.459 views

Category:

Education


0 download

DESCRIPTION

English translation of the presentation on Ken Wilber’s Integral framework I created and gave in April 2009 for the top-management of one large Moscow company (upon a friendly request from its owners).

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Integral approach:

5 basic components

Page 2: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Today we have access to…

…all cultures and knowledge in the world

Page 3: Integral approach: 5 basic components

How can we make sure not to get lost?

Page 4: Integral approach: 5 basic components

We need a road map

Page 5: Integral approach: 5 basic components

A bad map*

*will not work

Page 6: Integral approach: 5 basic components

A good map is better than a bad map.

Page 7: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Integral approach

— perhaps, the most comprehensive, simple, and

accurate map

Page 8: Integral approach: 5 basic components

5 basic factors

Quadrants Levels LinesStatesTypes

Page 9: Integral approach: 5 basic components

5 basic factors

Tracking them allows you to:• Take into account what’s needed• Fully realize– your own potential– the potential of your activities

Page 10: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Quadrants

Page 11: Integral approach: 5 basic components

QuadrantsBasic perspectives on• a human being• any issue

Main pronouns:1st person — “I”2nd person — “You” (“Thou”) *3rd person singular — “It”3rd person plural — “Its”

* In the dialogue of “I” + “Thou” the miracle of “We” emerges that is based on mutual understanding

Page 12: Integral approach: 5 basic components

I + YOU = WE

I am telling you…

IYOU

Page 13: Integral approach: 5 basic components

…about my new bike*

* Bicycle — “it. ”

Page 14: Integral approach: 5 basic components

ITSInterobjective connections

• ecosystems• environment• systems theory

Page 15: Integral approach: 5 basic components

4 quadrants— interior and exterior sides of individual and collective dimensions

Page 16: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Left-Hand Quadrants

— the interiors

Page 17: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Right-Hand Quadrants

— the exteriors

Page 18: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Upper Quadrants— individual dimension

Page 19: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Lower Quadrants— collective dimension

Page 20: Integral approach: 5 basic components

4 quadrantsEach occasion or event can always be looked at through the perspective of each of these quadrants.

Page 21: Integral approach: 5 basic components

4 quadrantsEach occasion or event always manifests simultaneously in all 4 quadrants.

Page 22: Integral approach: 5 basic components

4 quadrantsTherefore, an event that is seen in one quadrant always has correlates in the other three quadrants.

Page 23: Integral approach: 5 basic components

A thought just crossed

my mind!

Page 24: Integral approach: 5 basic components

This thought is accompanied by activation of neurons in the brain

Page 25: Integral approach: 5 basic components

My thinking is molded to a large degree by the culture that I inhabit

Page 26: Integral approach: 5 basic components

My organism exists within communicative webs of objective social systems

Page 27: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Thus:

Page 28: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Upper-Left Quadrant

• I, the cognizing subject

• My direct experiences, feelings, thoughts

• Meaning or depth that I find in my activities

CONSCIOUSNESS

Validity claim:• subjective truthfulness (honesty, sincerity)

Example of a methodology:• introspection

Page 29: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Upper-Right Quadrant

• It, the cognized object

• Objective organism

• Objectively measurable:• behavior• neural activation• hormones

MATERIAL OBJECT

Validity claim:• objective truth

Example of a methodology:• biology, physiology

Page 30: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Lower-Left Quadrant

• We, cultural context

• Interpersonal communication

• Worldview shared in the group• Group values• Corporate ethics

CULTURE

Validity claim:• intersubjective justness

Example of methodology:• hermeneutics

Page 31: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Lower-Right Quadrant

• Its, interobjective connections

• Techno-economic mode of production

• Environment, ecosystems

SOCIAL SYSTEMValidity claims:• functional fit

Example of methodology:• systems theory

Page 32: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Levels of Development

Page 33: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Evolution

• Evolution manifests in all quadrants.• Each new level of development transcends but includes the previous one: from

matter to life to mind to soul to Spirit; from physics to psychology to theology to mysticism.

Page 34: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Upper-Left (“I”)• Evolution of individual consciousness.• Development of cognitive capacities:

• preoperational cognition• concrete operational cognition• formal operational cognition• postformal cognition (vision logic)

Page 35: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Upper-Right (“It”)• Evolution of objective organism.• Evolutionary stages of the brain*:

• reptile brain: brain stem• instinctual behavior• basic survival programs

• mammalian brain: limbic system• affective reactions• emotional responses• “language of feelings”

• human brain: neocortex• thinking• rationality• verbal language

* The Triune Brain theory (McLean)

Page 36: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Lower-Left (“We”)• Cultural evolution.• Progress of worldviews:

• egocentrism• narcissism (the world as extension of me)• early childhood

• ethnocentrism• nationalism (perspective of only my group of people)• fascism• fundamentalism

• worldcentrism• cosmopolitism (perspectives of all groups of people in the world)• global ecological consciousness

Page 37: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Lower-Right (“Its”)• Evolution of social systems and technologies.• Techno-economic mode of production:

• foraging• horticultural• agrarian• industrial• informational

Page 38: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Lines of Development

Page 39: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Upper-Left (“I”)• Theory of multiple intelligences (H. Gardner)• Lines of development of:

• cognition (J. Piaget)• psychosexual (S. Freud)• emotional intelligence (D. Goleman)• hierarchy of needs (A. Maslow)• values (C. Graves, Spiral Dynamics)• self or ego development (S. Cook-Greuter)• moral development (L. Kohlberg)• and so on

Page 40: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Lower-Right (“Its”)• Lines of development:

• techno-economic mode of production• geopolitical structures• evolution of social systems / ecosystems

Page 41: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Upper-Right (“It”)• Lines of development:

• biological growth• neurophysiological development• evolution of behavior

Page 42: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Lower-Left (“We”)• Lines of development:

• cultural worldviews• shared values• mutual understanding• group identity

Page 43: Integral approach: 5 basic components

States of Consciousness

Page 44: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Waking— gross state of consciousness

Page 45: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Dreaming— subtle state of consciousness

Page 46: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Deep dreamless sleep— causal state of consciousness

Page 47: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Types

Page 48: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Typologies

• Masculine and feminine types• C. G. Jung’s psychological types• Enneagram

Page 49: Integral approach: 5 basic components

So:

Page 50: Integral approach: 5 basic components
Page 51: Integral approach: 5 basic components

Thank you for your attention!