xviii"I believe that, the prevailing system of management is, at its core, dedicated to mediocrity.
It forces people to work harder and harder to compensate for failing to tap the spirit and collective intelligence that characterizes
working together at their best. Deming saw this clearly..."
p.3"From an early age, we are taught to break apart problems, to fragment the world. This apparently
makes complex tasks and subjects manageable, but we pay a hidden, enormous price. We can no longer see the consequences of
our actions; we lose our intrinsic sense of connection to a larger whole... The tools and ideas presented in this book are
for destroying the illusion that the world is created of separate, unrelated forces."
p.4"deep down, we are all learners... not only is it in our nature to learn but we love to learn."
p.6-9"Today, I believe, five new component technologies are gradually converging to innovate learning
organizations... Systems Thinking... Personal Mastery... Mental Models... Building Shared Vision... Team Learning"
p.7"Systems thinking is a conceptual framework, a body of knowledge and tools that has been developed
over the past fifty years, to make the full patterns clearer, and to help us see how to change them effectively."
p.8"Mental models are deeply ingrained assumptions, generalizations, or even pictures that influence
how we understand the world and how we take action. Very often, we are not consciously aware of our mental models or the effects
they have on our behavior... Many insights into new markets or outmoded organizational practices fail to get put into practice
because they conflict with powerful, tacit mental models... The discipline of working with mental models starts with turning
the mirror inward; learning to unearth our internal pictures of the world, to bring them to the surface and hold them rigorously
to scrutiny."
p.10"To practice a discipline is to be a lifelong learner. You never arrive; you spend your life mastering
disciplines."
p.11-12"systems thinking is the fifth discipline. It is the discipline that integrates the disciplines,
fusing them into a coherent body of theory and practice."
p.12"systems thinking also needs the disciplines of building shared vision, mental models, team learning,
and personal mastery to realize its potential."
p.14"When I first entered graduate school at MIT I was already convinced that most of the problems
faced by humankind concerned our inability to grasp and manage the increasingly complex systems of our world. Little has happened
since to change my view."
p.14"Jay Forrester... maintained that the causes of many pressing public issues, from urban decay
to global ecological threat, lay in the very well-intentioned policies designed to alleviate them. These problems were 'actually
systems' that lured policymakers into interventions that focused on obvious symptoms not underlying causes, which produced
short-term benefit but long-term malaise, and fostered the need for still more symptomatic interventions."
p.19"When people in organizations focus only on their position, they have little sense of responsibility
for the results produced when all positions interact. Moreover, when results are disappointing, it can be very difficult to
know why. All you can do is assume that 'someone screwed up.' ... When we focus only on our position, we do not see how our
own actions extend beyond the boundary of that position."
p.21"True proactiveness comes from seeing how we contribute to our own problems."
p.21"We are conditioned to see life as a series of events, and for every event, we think there is
one obvious cause."
p.71"Conventional forecasting, planning, and analysis methods are not equipped to deal with dynamic
complexity... When the same action has dramatically different effects in the sort run and the long run, there is dynamic complexity.
When an action has one set of consequences locally and a very different set of consequences in another part of the system,
there is dynamic complexity. When obvious interactions produce nonobvious consequences, there is dynamic complexity."
p.72"The real leverage in most management situations lies in understanding dynamic complexity, not
detail complexity."
p.73"The essence of the discipline of systems thinking lies in a shift of mind:
seeing interrelationships
rather than linear cause-effect chains, and
seeing processes of change rather than snapshots
The practice of
systems thinking starts with understanding a simple concept called 'feedback' that shows how actions can reinforce or counteract
(balance) each other... Ultimately, it simplifies life by helping us see the deeper patterns lying behind the events and the
details."
p.77"The more complete statement of causality is that my intent to fill a glass of water creates a
system that causes water to flow in when the level is low, then shuts the flow off when the glass is full. In other words,
the structure causes the behavior and the structure is brought into play by my intention and action. This distinction is important
because seeing only individual actions and missing the structure underlying the actions... lies at the root of our powerlessness
in complex situations."
p.86"To understand how an organism works we must understand its balancing processes - those that are
explicit and implicit... Though simple in concept, balancing processes can generate surprising and problematic behavior
if they go undetected.
In general, balancing loops are more difficult to see than reinforcing loops because it often
looks like nothing is happening."
p.101"But there is another lesson from the limits to growth structure as well. There will always be
more limiting processes. When one source of limitation is removed or made weaker, growth returns until a new source of limitation
is encountered. ...the fundamental lesson is that growth eventually will stop. Efforts to extend the growth by removing limits
can actually be counterproductive, forestalling the eventual day of reckoning."
p.118"WonderTech's managers had fallen prey to the classic learning disability of being unable to
detect cause and effect separated in time."
p.124"The art of systems thinking lies in being able to recognize increasingly (dynamically) complex
and subtle structures... amid the wealth of details, pressures, and cross currents that attend all real management settings.
In fact, the essence of mastering systems thinking as a management discipline lies in seeing patterns where others see only
events and forces to react to. Yet few are trained to see detail and dynamic complexity... In effect, the art of systems thinking
lies in seeing through the detail complexity to the underlying structures generating change... it means organizing detail
complexity into a coherent story that illuminates the causes of problems and how they can be remedied in enduring ways." [JLJ
- a great idea for game theory]
p.137"A subtler form of diminished vision is 'focusing on the means not the result.' ... The ability
to focus on the ultimate intrinsic desires, not only on secondary goals, is a cornerstone of personal mastery.
Real
vision cannot be understood in isolation from the idea of purpose."
p.170"Learning how to work with mental models was a key element in BP's rapid rise during the last
fifteen years to number two ranked global oil company in sales and volume (after Exxon)"
p.209"In Chapter 8, I argued that personal vision, by itself, is not the key to releasing the energy
of the creative process. The key is 'creative tension,' the tension between vision and reality. The most effective people
are those who can 'hold' their vision while remaining committed to seeing current reality clearly."