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Social Studies skills: Difference between revisions

→‎Order v. Chaos: building out section
(→‎Order v. Chaos: building out section)
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>> todo: bring in Mancur Olson and Theory of Groups >> see [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mancur_Olson wiki entry Mancur Olson] about how interests tend to coalesce over time and focus on protection of gains, stifling innovation... organizations become "congealed" (from("How Phil Falcone Was LightSnared" WSJ, Homlan W. Jenkins, Jr. 2/18/2012") and resist competition and protect the status quo
>> todo: bring in Mancur Olson and Theory of Groups >> see [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mancur_Olson wiki entry Mancur Olson] about how interests tend to coalesce over time and focus on protection of gains, stifling innovation... organizations become "congealed" (from("How Phil Falcone Was LightSnared" WSJ, Homlan W. Jenkins, Jr. 2/18/2012") and resist competition and protect the status quo


==Order v. Chaos==
==Order & Chaos==
* humans dislike change
* humans fear the unknown
* humans yearn for predictability
** think of religions, rituals, superstitions
*** designed to bring order and predictability to a situation
 
 
=== Order ===
* social structures are primarily designed to bring stability to human interactions
* order advantages
** stability
** predictability
*** especially for commerce, food supply, peaceful existence
* order disadvantages:
** inequities inherent in any large social structure
** inability to self-correct
* consequences of too much order:
** lack of feedback and information
** dissolution and atrophy
** systems decline, can't adjust to change
** may lead to unintended negative consequences
 
=== Chaos ===
* chaos is either cause or effect of change
* chaos as "change agent"
* benefits of chaos:
** correction
** challenging inequities or innefficiencies in an overly-structured system
 
=== ideal balance of order & chaos ===
* healthy systems combine elements of both
** creating predictability and stability
*** while mitigating harms of overly structured system
* feedback and self-adjustment without a need for drastic change


== Certainty v. Uncertainty ==
== Certainty v. Uncertainty ==