what’s your problem?

17 it's another

Translation:

What do you care about?
How are you alive?

What if life is found where a noble problem is identified?  There are certainly plenty of them.

Beyond our personal problems, these are problems experienced by others – maybe others we’ll never meet:

‘Today’s ubiquitous web-based connections and social media support this longing for a personal identity that transcends the individual, the tribe, the nation, and religion.’*

Peter Senge argues, ‘It is crucial that you don’t frame your goal in the context of what you know today.  If you do, you will limit the reach of your aspiration.’**

This means new territory: ‘everyone will be innovating without anyone having a manual on how to do it.’**

This expression of innovation will be found in clouds of problem-solvers.

Which cloud is yours?

(*From Alex McManus’s Makers of Fire.)
(**From Peter Senge’s The Necessary Revolution.  Also, check out Otto Scharmer’s Theory U: presently in the UK, we’re experiencing a milk crisis.  With the over-production of milk worldwide, UK farmers are finding the cost of producing milk is higher than what they are being paid.  This morning I caught an interview on the radio involving someone from, I think, the Adam Smith Insitiute and a Northern Irish SDLP Member of Parliament: one was arguing for a free market and the other for government intervention.  In terms of Theory U** – something Senge has been involved in creating – the former is Business 2.0 and the latter Business 3.0, but what we need is Business 4.0.)

 

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