Hidden Connections
Hidden Connections
Hidden Connections
by Fritjof Capra (click on title for book link; on name for biography/site of author)
The design principles of our future social institutions must be consistent with the
principles of organization that nature has evolved to sustain the web of life. A
unified conceptual framework for the understanding of material and social
structures will be essential for this task. The purpose of this book is to provide a
first sketch of such a framework.
p. 6 Let us now return to the question "What is life?" and ask: How does a
bacterial cell work? What are its defining characteristics? When we look at a cell
under an electron microscope, we notice that its metabolic processes involve special
macromolecules—very large molecules consisting of long chains of hundreds of
atoms. Two kinds of these macromolecules are found in all cells: proteins and
nucleic acids (DNA and RNA).
In the bacterial cell, there are essentially two types of proteins—enzymes, which
act as catalysts of various metabolic processes, and structural proteins, which are
part of the cell structure. In higher organisms, there are also many other types of
proteins with specialized functions, such as the antibodies of the immune system or
the hormones.
Since most metabolic processes are catalyzed by enzymes and enzymes are
specified by genes, the cellular processes are genetically controlled, which gives
them great stability. The RNA molecules serve as messengers, delivering coded
information for the synthesis of enzymes from the DNA, thus establishing the
critical link between the cell's genetic and metabolic features.
p. 10 The cell membrane is the first defining characteristic of cellular life. The
second characteristic is the nature of the metabolism that takes place within the
cell boundary. In the words of microbiologist Lynn Margulis: "Metabolism, the
incessant chemistry of self-maintenance, is an essential feature of life ... Through
ceaseless metabolism, through chemical and energy flow, life continuously
produces, repairs, and perpetuates itself. Only cells, and organisms composed of
cells, metabolize."
When we take a closer look at the processes of metabolism, we notice that they
form a chemical network. This is another fundamental feature of life. As ecosystems
are understood in terms of food webs (networks of organisms), so organisms are
viewed as networks of cells, organs and organ systems, and cells as networks of
molecules. One of the key insights of the systems approach has been the realization
that the network is a pattern that is common to all life. Wherever we see life, we
see networks.
The metabolic network of a cell involves very special dynamics that differ strikingly
from the cell's nonliving environment. Taking in nutrients from the outside world,
the cell sustains itself by means of a network of chemical reactions that take place
inside the boundary and produce all of the cell's components, including those of the
boundary itself.
A key insight of the new understanding of life has been that biological forms and
functions are not simply determined by a genetic blueprint but are emergent
properties of the entire epigenetic (embryonic development by gradual change)
network. To understand their emergence, we need to understand not only the
genetic structures and the cell's biochemistry, but also the complex dynamics that
unfold when the epigenetic network encounters the physical and chemical
constraints of its environment.
The starting point for this is the observation that all cellular structures exist far
from thermodynamic equilibrium and would soon decay toward the equilibrium
state—in other words, the cell would die—if the cellular metabolism did not use a
continual flow of energy to restore structures as fast as they are decaying. This
means that we need to describe the cell as an open system. Living systems are
organizationally closed—they are autopoietic networks—but materially and ener-
getically open. They need to feed on continual flows of matter and energy from
their environment to stay alive. Conversely, cells, like all living organisms,
continually produce waste, and this flow-through of matter—food and waste—
establishes their place in the food web. In the words of Lynn Margulis, "The cell has
an automatic relationship with somebody else. It leaks something, and somebody
else will eat it."
Detailed studies of the flow of matter and energy through complex systems have
resulted in the theory of dissipative structures developed by Ilya Prigogine and his
collaborators. A dissipative structure, as described by Prigogine, is an open system
that maintains itself in a state far from equilibrium, yet is nevertheless stable: the
same overall structure is maintained in spite of an ongoing flow and change of
components. Prigogine chose the term "dissipative structures" to emphasize this
close interplay between structure on the one hand and flow and change (or
dissipation) on the other.
p. 31 Now, let us return to the question posed at the beginning of this chapter—
what are the defining characteristics of living systems?—and summarize what we
have learned. Focusing on bacteria as the simplest living systems, we characterized
a living cell as a membrane-bounded, self-generating, organizationally closed
metabolic network. This network involves several types of highly complex
macromolecules: structural proteins; enzymes, which act as catalysts of metabolic
processes; RNA, the messengers carrying genetic information; and DNA, which
stores the genetic information and is responsible for the cell's self-replication.
We also learned that the cellular network is materially and energetically open, using
a constant flow of matter and energy to produce, repair and perpetuate itself; and
that it operates far from equilibrium, where new structures and new forms of order
may spontaneously emerge, thus leading to development and evolution.
The second type of structural changes in a living system are those which create
new structures—new connections in the autopoietic network. These changes,
developmental rather than cyclical, also take place continually, either as a
consequence of environmental influences or as a result of the system's internal
dynamics.
Now, since an organism records previous structural changes, and since each
structural change influences the organism's future behavior, this implies that the
behavior of the living organism is dictated by its structure. In Maturana's
terminology, the behavior of living systems is "structure-determined."
This notion sheds new light on the age-old philosophical debate about freedom and
determinism. According to Maturana, the behavior of a living organism is
determined, but rather than being determined by outside forces, it is determined by
the organism's own structure—a structure formed by a succession of autonomous
structural changes. Hence the behavior of the living organism is both determined
and free.
When carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen atoms bond in a certain way to form sugar,
the resulting compound has a sweet taste. The sweetness resides neither in the C,
nor in the O, nor in the H; it resides in the pattern that emerges from their
interaction. It is an emergent property. Moreover, strictly speaking, the sweetness
is not a property of the chemical bonds. It is a sensory experience that arises when
the sugar molecules interact with the chemistry of our taste buds, which in turn
causes a set of neurons to fire in a certain way. The experience of sweetness
emerges from that neural activity.
p. 42 Thus, the simple statement that the characteristic property of sugar is its
sweetness really refers to a series of emergent phenomena at different levels of
complexity. Chemists have no conceptual problem with these emergent phenomena
when they identify a certain class of compounds as sugars because of their sweet
taste. Nor will future cognitive scientists have conceptual problems with other kinds
of emergent phenomena when they analyze them in terms of the resulting
conscious experience, as well as in terms of the relevant biochemistry and
neurobiology.
p. 52 Humberto Maturana was one of the first scientists to link the biology of
human consciousness to language in a systematic way. He did so by approaching
language through a careful analysis of communication within the framework of the
Santiago Theory of Cognition. Communication, according to Maturana, is not the
transmission of information but rather the coordination of behavior between living
organisms through mutual structural coupling. In these recurrent interactions, the
living organisms change together through their mutual triggering of structural
changes. Such mutual coordination is the key characteristic of communication for
all living organisms, with or without nervous systems, and it becomes more and
more subtle and elaborate with nervous systems of increasing complexity.
When we study living systems from the perspective of form, we find that their
pattern of organization is that of a self-generating network. From the perspective of
matter, the material structure of a living system is a dissipative structure, i.e. an
open system operating far from' equilibrium. From the process perspective, finally,
living systems are cognitive systems in which the process of cognition is closely
MATTER
PROCESS
To give equal importance to each of these three perspectives is difficult for most
scientists because of the persistent influence of our Cartesian heritage. The natural
sciences are supposed to deal with material phenomena, but only one of the three
perspectives is concerned with the study of matter. The other two deal with
relationships, qualities, patterns, and processes, all of which are nonmaterial. Of
course, no scientist would deny the existence of patterns and processes, but most
of them think of a pattern as an emergent property of matter, an idea abstracted
from matter, rather than a generative force.
To focus on material structures and the forces between them, and to view the
patterns of organization resulting from these forces as secondary emergent
phenomena has been very effective in physics and chemistry, but when we come to
living systems this approach is no longer adequate. The essential characteristic that
distinguishes living from nonliving systems—the cellular metabolism—is not a
property of matter, nor a special "vital force." It is a specific pattern of relationships
among chemical processes. Although it involves relationships between processes
that produce material components, the network pattern itself is nonmaterial.
p. 73 When we try to extend the new understanding of life to the social domain,
we immediately come up against a bewildering multitude of phenomena—rules of
behavior, values, intentions, goals, strategies, designs, power relations—that play
Quotes from The Hidden Connection, Fritjof Capra 9
no role in most of the nonhuman world but are essential to human social life.
However, these diverse characteristics of social reality all share a basic common
feature, which provides a natural link to the systems view of life developed in the
preceding pages.
For example, to understand the meaning of a literary text, one needs to establish
the multiple contexts of its words and phrases. This can be a purely intellectual
endeavor, but it may also reach a deeper level. If the context of an idea or
expression includes relationships involving our own selves, it becomes meaningful
to us in a personal way. This deeper sense of meaning includes an emotional
dimension and may even bypass reason altogether. Something may be profoundly
meaningful to us through context provided by direct experience.
Mechanistically oriented managers tend to hold on to the belief that they can
control the organization if they understand how all its parts fit together. Even the
daily experience that people's behavior contradicts their expectations does not
make them doubt their basic assumption. On the contrary, it compels them to
investigate the mechanisms of management in greater detail in order to be able to
control them.
We are dealing here with a crucial difference between a living system and a
machine. A machine can be controlled; a living system, according to the systemic
understanding of life, can only be disturbed. In other words, organizations cannot
be controlled through direct interventions, but they can be influenced by giving
impulses rather than instructions. To change the conventional style of management
requires a shift of perception that is anything but easy, but it also brings great re-
wards. Working with the processes inherent in living systems means that we do not
need to spend a lot of energy to move an organization. There is no need to push,
pull, or bully it to make it change. Force or energy are not the issue; the issue is
meaning. Meaningful disturbances will get the organization's attention and will
trigger structural changes.
Giving meaningful impulses rather than precise instructions may sound far too
vague to managers used to striving for efficiency and predictable results, but it is
well known that intelligent, alert people rarely carry out instructions exactly to the
letter. They always modify and reinterpret them, ignore some parts and add others
of their own making. Sometimes, it may be merely a change of emphasis, but
people always respond with new versions of the original instructions.
The task is to make the process of change meaningful to people right from the
start, to get their participation, and to provide an environment in which their
creativity can flourish.
Offering impulses and guiding principles rather than strict instructions evidently
amounts to significant changes in power relations, from domination and control to
cooperation and partnerships. This, too, is a fundamental implication of the new
understanding of life. In recent years, biologists and ecologists have begun to shift
their metaphors from hierarchies to networks and have come to realize that
partnership—the tendency to associate, establish links, cooperate, and maintain
symbiotic relationships—is one of the hallmarks of life.
This process involves several distinct stages. To begin with, there must be a certain
openness within the organization, a willingness to be disturbed, in order to set the
process in motion; and there has to be an active network of communications with
multiple feedback loops to amplify the triggering event. The next stage is the point
of instability, which may be experienced as tension, chaos, uncertainty, or crisis. At
this stage, the system may either break down, or it may break through to a new
state of order, which is characterized by novelty and involves an experience of
creativity that often feels like magic.
Let us take a closer look at these stages. The initial openness to disturbances from
the environment is a basic property of all life. Living organisms need to be open to
a constant flow of resources (energy and matter) to stay alive; human
organizations need to be open to a flow of mental resources (information and
ideas), as well as to the flows of energy and materials that are part of the
production of goods or services. The openness of an organization to new concepts,
new technologies and new knowledge is an indicator of its aliveness, flexibility, and
learning capabilities.
The experience of the critical instability that leads to emergence usually involves
strong emotions—fear, confusion, self-doubt, or pain—and may even amount to an
existential crisis. This was the experience of the small community of quantum
physicists in the 1920s, when their exploration of the atomic and subatomic world
brought them into contact with a strange and unexpected reality. In their struggle
to comprehend this new reality, the physicists became painfully aware that their
basic concepts, their language, and their whole way of thinking were inadequate for
describing atomic phenomena.
For many of them, this period was an intense emotional crisis, as described most
vividly by Werner Heisenberg:
“I remember discussions with Bohr which went through many hours till
very late at night and ended almost in despair; and when at the end of
the discussion I went alone for a walk in the neighboring park I repeated
to myself again and again the question: Can nature possibly be so absurd
as it seemed to us in these atomic experiments?”
It took the quantum physicists a long time to overcome their crisis, but in the end
the reward was great. From their intellectual and emotional struggles emerged
deep insights into the nature of space, time, and matter, and with them the
outlines of a new scientific paradigm.
p. 119 In human organizations, emergent solutions are created within the context
of a particular organizational culture, and generally cannot be transferred to
another organization with a different culture. This tends to be a big problem for
business leaders who, naturally, are very keen on replicating successful
organizational change. What they tend to do is replicate a new structure that has
been successful without transferring the tacit knowledge and context of meaning
from which the new structure emerged.
p. 122-123 Finding the right balance between design and emergence seems to
require the blending of two different kinds of leadership. The traditional idea of a
leader is that of a person who is able to hold a vision, to articulate it clearly and to
communicate it with passion and charisma. It is also a person whose actions
embody certain values that serve as a standard for others to strive for. The ability
to hold a clear vision of an ideal form, or state of affairs, is something that
traditional leaders have in common with designers.
The other kind of leadership consists in facilitating the emergence of novelty. This
means creating conditions rather than giving directions, and using the power of
authority to empower others. Both kinds of leadership have to do with creativity.
Being a leader means creating a vision; it means going where nobody has gone
before. It also means enabling the community as a whole to create something new.
Facilitating emergence means facilitating creativity.
Holding a vision is central to the success of any organization, because all human
beings need to feel that their actions are meaningful and geared toward specific
goals. At all levels of the organization, people need to have a sense of where they
are going. A vision is a mental image of what we want to achieve, but visions are
much more complex than concrete goals and tend to defy expression in ordinary,
rational terms. Goals can be measured, while vision is qualitative and much more
intangible.
Leaders often find it difficult to establish the feedback loops that increase the
organization's connectedness. They tend to turn to the same people again and
again—usually the most powerful in the organization, who often resist change.
Moreover, chief executives often feel that, because of the organization's traditions
and past history, certain delicate issues cannot be addressed openly.
In those cases, one of the most effective approaches for a leader may be to hire an
outside consultant as a "catalyst." Being a catalyst means that the consultant is not
affected by the processes she helps to initiate, and thus is able to analyze the
situation much more clearly. Angelika Siegmund, cofounder of Corphis Consulting in
Munich, Germany, describes this work in the following words:
The experience of the critical instability that precedes the emergence of novelty
may involve uncertainty, fear, confusion, or self-doubt. Experienced leaders
recognize these emotions as integral parts of the whole dynamic and create a
climate of trust and mutual support. In today’s turbulent global economy this is
especially important, because people are often in fear of losing their jobs as a
consequence of corporate mergers or other radical structural changes. This fear
generates a strong resistance to change, hence building trust is essential.