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Leadership and the New Science: Discovering Order in a Chaotic World [ILLUSTRATED] (Paperback)
by Margaret J Wheatley
Category:
Leadership, Management, Organizational behavior |
Market price: ¥ 208.00
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¥ 178.00
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MSL Pointer Review:
Based on the parallels above mentioned, the author brings lot of compelling ideas about the leadership and organizational management. This book isn't a collection of dos and don'ts, but invigorates deep creative thinking.
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Author: Margaret J Wheatley
Publisher: Berrett-Koehler Publishers; 3rd ed. edition
Pub. in: September, 2006
ISBN: 1576753441
Pages: 218
Measurements: 8.9 x 7.4 x 0.7 inches
Origin of product: USA
Order code: BA01257
Other information: ISBN-13: 978-1576753446
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- MSL Picks -
In this brilliant book, Margaret J. Weathley brings parallels between the theory of leadership and the quantum physics. Being an organizational consultant, not the physical by herself, she encourages "to stop seeking after the universe of the seventeenth century and begin to explore what has become known to us during the twentieth century".
She exposes the bright conclusions from her experience of working as a consultant, and these conclusions are confirmed by quantum physics as well:
- The things we fear most in organizations - disruptions, confusion, chaos - need not be interpreted as signs that we are about to be destroyed. Instead, these conditions are necessary to awaken creativity.
- What is critical is the relationship created between two or more elements. Systems influence individuals, and individuals call form systems.
- There is no objective reality; the environment we experience does not exist "out there". It is co-created through our acts of observation, what we choose to notice and worry about.
- Acting should precede planning.
- Instead of the ability to analyze and predict, we need to know how to stay acutely aware of what's happening now, and we need to be better, faster learners from what just happened.
- We need fewer descriptions of tasks and instead learn how to facilitate process.
- Power becomes a problem, not a capacity. People use their creativity to work against these leaders, or in spite of them; they refuse to contribute positively to the organization.
- Those who have used music metaphors to describe working together, especially jazz metaphors, are sensing to the nature of this quantum world. This world demands that we be present together, and be willing to improvise.
- If a manager is told that a new trainee is particularly gifted, that manager will see genius emerging from the trainee's mouth even in obscure statements. But if the manager is told that his or her new hire is a bit slow on the uptake, the manager will interpret a brilliant idea as a sure sign of sloppy thinking of obfuscation.
- In quantum world, what you see is what you get.
- Every time we go to measure something, we interfere.
- A place where the act of looking for certain information evokes the information we went looking for - and simultaneously eliminates our opportunity to observe other information.
- Every observation is preceded by a choice about what to observer.
- We all construct the world though lenses of our own making and use these to filter and select.
- It simply doesn't work to ask people to sign on when they haven't been involved in the planning process.
- Roles mean nothing without understanding the network of relationships and the resources that are required to support the work of that person. In this relational world, it is foolish to think we can define any person solely in terms of isolated tasks and accountabilities.
- What is distinguishable and important, he says, are the kinds of connections.
- Our old views constrain us. They deprive us from engaging fully with this universe of potentials.
Based on the parallels above mentioned, Margaret J. Weathley brings lot of compelling ideas about the leadership and organizational management. This book isn't a collection of dos and don'ts, but invigorates deep creative thinking.
(From quoting Maxim Masiutin, USA)
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Margaret Wheatley is president of the Berkana Institute, a non-profit educational and scientific research foundation supporting the discovery of new organizational forms. She is also a principal of Kellner-Rogers & Wheatley, Inc., a consulting firm that focuses on applying natural science principles in self-organization that engage the intelligence of the entire organization to respond to change continuously. Kellner-Rogers & Wheatley is actively experimenting with organizational redesigns that support the speed, flexibility, resiliency, and autonomy required in today’s environment. Their clients encompass a wide variety of organizations, ranging from Fortune 500 companies, to healthcare, educational, governmental, and non-profit institutions, both in the U.S. and abroad.
Wheatley is the author of Leadership and the New Science , which was named Best Management Book of 1992 in Industry Week magazine. This book is credited with establishing a fundamentally new approach to how we think about organization. It has been translated into seven languages and featured in many business publications, including Fortune, CIO, Industry Week, Working Woman, and many industry specific journals. Her new book, A Simpler Way, was coauthored with Myron Kellner-Rogers.
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From Publisher
Leadership and the New Science launched a revolution by demonstrating that ideas drawn from quantum physics, chaos theory, and molecular biology could improve organizational performance. Margaret Wheatley called for free-flowing information, individual empowerment, relationship networks, and organizational change that evolves organically - ideas that have become commonplace. Now Wheatley's updated classic, based on her experiences with these ideas in a diverse number of organizations on five continents, is available in paperback.
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View all 7 comments |
Amazon.com (MSL quote), USA
<2008-03-26 00:00>
When Margaret J. Wheatley's Leadership and the New Science was initially published in 1992, it outlined an unquestionably unique but extremely challenging view of change, leadership, and the structure of groups. Many readers immediately embraced its cutting-edge perspective, but others just could not understand how the complicated scientific tenets it described could be used to reshape institutions. Now Wheatley, an organizational specialist who has since coauthored A Simpler Way, updates the original by including additional material (such as an epilogue addressing her personal experiences during the past decade) and reconstructing some of her more challenging concepts. The result is a much clearer work that first explores the implications of quantum physics on organizational practice, then investigates ways that biology and chemistry affect living systems, and finally focuses on chaos theory, the creation of a new order, and the manner that scientific principles affect leadership. "Our old ways of relating to each other don't support us any longer," she writes. "It is up to us to journey forth in search of new practices and new ideas that will enable us to create lives and organizations worthy of human habitation." -Howard Rothman |
AudioFile (MSL quote), USA
<2008-03-26 00:00>
In this revised edition of her 1992 book, Wheatley provides an overview of some dramatic changes in scientific thought, such as chaos theory and quantum physics, and then applies those theories to organizations. What kind of organizations? Organizations of all sizes and shapes and business. Wheatley reads her work competently, in a controlled, even voice. Her straightforward presentation offers few distractions and is easy listening. She integrates the theoretical with a range of practical examples from many of the organizations she has worked with. J.E.M. © AudioFile 2001, Portland, Maine- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine |
Ken Blanchard, author of The One Minute Manager, Raving Fans, USA
<2008-03-26 00:00>
A book like Leadership and the New Science only comes along once in a decade. Margaret Wheatley pushes our thinking about people and organizations to a new dimension. You will never think about organizational life in the same way again. |
Stephen E. Ewing, President and CEO, Michigan Consolidated Gas Company , USA
<2008-03-26 00:00>
If there's a single book that sets the stage for the future of organizations, this is it.... Wheatley makes complex ideas simple, and then shows how those simple ideas can be used as powerful tools. |
View all 7 comments |
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