Warren Kinston
1. May 2013 09:00
Mastery: it takes willingness. More particularly it depends on learning in a way that uses your willingness to the full. But you have to be willing.
I am always amazed at just how often willingness is omitted in academic models and management consulting tools. Even the famous GROW model: Goals, Reality, Options, Will pussyfoots. But willingness cannot be taken for granted and, rather than being synonymous with will, it is the 7th Level in the Will Hierarchy. Consciousness in Western society has not yet fully embraced this highest experience-dominated level (nor the 7th Level of many other THEE frameworks).
Learning is a manifestation of willingness-PH7 and is current located at level-6. Becoming maximally effective, mastering something that is important to you, is surely related to learning. I noticed that mastery can be developed in distinct and contradictory ways. This is precisely what characterizes a Principal Typology in THEE.
A dollop of generous help has let me work out the Principal Typology nested in Learning-L6 within Willingness-PH7. This blog provides some initial thoughts:More...
About
Warren Kinston
Warren Kinston
3. March 2013 10:00
Warning: This blog is a human story but it has a lot of references to taxonomic architecture.
I know that I can never complete the Taxonomy myself, but it seems important that I get the basics sufficiently clarified so that others can continue and complete the work. In that regard, I recently had an interesting and gratifying experience that I would like to share with you.
When I talk about «basics», there are two sorts of «basic»: basic principles (not the focus of this blog), and basic content. In terms of content, the underpinning forms to be discovered and formulated are the single Root Hierarchy, the 7 Primary Hierarchies and their 7 Principal Typologies. From these 15 patterns, a couple of hundred frameworks await reflective investigators. (I promise myself that I will use the TOP Studio to provide members with an exact count.)
The Principal Typologies are of enormous importance because More...
About
Warren Kinston