"Occupy Integral!" was originally published in the online magazine Beams & Struts by my friends Terry Patten and Marco Morelli. In Part 1 of the interview I asked them to describe what’s really happening to our world from an integral perspective. Here in Part 2 of the interview, I ask them to elaborate on how the Integral Movement might have a greater impact for positive change during this time of significant transformation. Brett: Historically, the "integral movement" has been largely characterized by people interested in spiritual/philosophical/psychological theories, maps and models, along with a large focus on personal development. Your blog at IntegralRevolution.com suggests that integralists might play a significant role in the changes we are seeing on the planet. What mental or attitudinal shift, or what realization do you think integralists need to make in order to move from "watching from the sidelines" to getting "out onto the field" and into the … [Read more...]
Occupy Integral (Interview)
In this two-part interview, Brett Thomas asks the authors of Occupy Integral to explain what’s really happening to our world from an integral perspective and how the Integral Movement can have a greater impact for positive change. [Occupy Integral! was originally published in the online magazine Beams & Struts by Terry Patten and Marco Morelli.] In Occupy Integral! Terry and Marco write : We post this manifesto in what feels like a moment of calm before the storm... it seems to be the quiescence or exhaustion following a complicated year. From revolutions in the Middle East to the Occupy protests in the US and globally, there is an upheaval brewing . . . and spilling over. We are four years into the global economic crisis, yet the fundamental issues relating to sustainability, debt, inequality, and so on have not been truly addressed, let alone resolved. Our political systems are in stalemate. Environmental signals are growing more distressing. Not only melting ice … [Read more...]
Modern Sports and Premodern Worldviews

Christ! Where was God when Tim Tebow and the Broncos lost so badly? Did Jesus take the night off or has he forsaken poor devoted Tebow! USA Today asks, "When Tebow loses, does God too?" I'm so confused! For some, the answer to this question lies in the now-famous Saturday Night Live Skit featuring Tim Tebow and Jesus Christ. If you haven't seen it, it is highly recommended. Perhaps my favorite is this recent national poll of over 1,000 registered U.S. voters that reveals that 43 percent of people polled think Tim Tebow’s success is due to divine intervention… including 54 percent of Republicans. We have written extensively here at Integral Thinkers, and in other publications, about the power of worldviews. There are four primary worldviews in the developed world: Modern, Postmodern, Traditional and Imperial. Tim Tebow's biblical worldview seems at odds with modern sports in a postmodern media environment. Why is it so fascinating? The answer to that question is … [Read more...]
Integral Should Be More Like Apple

Integralists that have been following the blogosphere are noticing a growing current of conversations on the theme, or question, of "Why isn't Integral more popular?" There are many variations on the theme, including "Why isn't Integral more relevant?" and "What does Integral need to do to make more of a difference in the world?" Many of my friends and colleagues have weighed in on this important question in recent weeks. Jason Digges just published a thoughtful, nuanced article on this very question in Beams and Struts. He suggests, "In short we need to take personal responsibility for formulating integral philosophy in a way that exemplifies simplicity beyond complexity." I couldn't agree more. In fact, simplicity beyond complexity is a theme I wrote about in my recently published online Integral Leadership Manifesto. Robb Smith has suggested some possible reasons why Integral isn't more popular in the Facebook discussion group Integral Institute Global Design. Not entirely … [Read more...]
AQAL Elements Applied to Leadership
This article provides a handy overview of the elements of the Integral framework applied to leadership. Organizational leadership is a dynamic process involving a number of separate yet interconnected activities such as evaluating a situation or state-of-affairs, envisioning a desired future state and objectives to work toward, creating some kind of plan and/or strategy to achieve those objectives, coordinating efforts of various people and processes, evaluating progress and current conditions, and continually adjusting the strategies and tactics until the desired objective (or change) has been accomplished. Clearly, hundreds of books have been written on various aspects of management and leadership theory that address the nuance of these activities. Like all things integral, there are many legitimate and valid ways to render an idea. A number of models of Integral Leadership have been proposed, and in the years to come, many new models will emerge. There can be a lot of merit in … [Read more...]
New and Improved Worldview Lenses
Worldviews can be thought of as lenses through which we perceive and interpret our subjective experience. This "worldview contact lens" advertisement spoof highlights how worldviews color our interpretation of reality. For readers less familiar with the concept of worldviews... a handy worldview primer is offered below that correlates them with the style of leadership each prefers. This is a central aspect of Integral Leadership. These crucial lenses are a primary way human beings filter subjective experience (of objective reality) and interpret those experiences in terms of: how things appear to be; how things should be; what's right and wrong with how things are, and what, if anything, should be done about it. Clearly then, this is of paramount importance if we are interested in understanding how people make sense of the world we share, and especially as leaders, how we can better understand what people care about, their priorities, their motivations, and … [Read more...]
Two Minute Introduction to Integral Leadership

The Integral Leadership Model can be expressed in several different ways representing increasing levels of complexity encompassing all of the elements of AQAL: quadrants, lines, levels, states and types. My colleagues and I have written and taught extensively on the details of this practice, but for purposes here, I am going to present the most basic expression of the model: Awareness, Approach, Action.* Experience has shown that if you survey a group of people with these three questions about the SAME situation, you will get wildly different answers. These answers will reflect what these individuals are aware of and not aware of, what they emphasize and focus on (biases) and what perspectives they valorize or deliberately ignore (privilege or under-privilege). The most obvious factor that influences how a leader (or person) answers these questions is his or her worldview. Integral leaders use a simple model of four worldviews: Modern, Postmodern, Traditional and Imperial. … [Read more...]
Reaction to Gay Marriage = Litmus Test for Worldview

In what Mayor Michael Bloomberg called "a historic triumph for equality and freedom," New York joined the growing number of states that have legalized gay marriage, including: Massachusetts (2004), Connecticut (2008), Iowa (2009), Vermont (2009), New Hampshire (2010), and Washington, D.C. (2010). Modern, postmodern and integral thinkers nationwide celebrate New York's decision to take its place on the "right side of history." Traditional thinkers obviously don't agree with this view—which I will elaborate on below. Bloomberg also offered support to the Republicans who voted for the measure, stating that he believetheir actions were consistent with GOP ideals of liberty and freedom, "The Republicans who stood up today for those principles I think will long be remembered for their courage, foresight and wisdom" He added, "Ten, 20, 30 years from now, I believe they will look back on this vote as one of the finest and most proud moments in their life." Indeed. The Human … [Read more...]
The End of the World May 21, 2011
Judgment Day is May 21, 2011. This is the day that Jesus will claim his true believers and everyone else will be cast into hell. Don't believe me? Well the Bible guarantees it. Quite a few news stories have shown up in several news outlets over the past week about, as the Associated Press says, "a movement of Christians loosely organized by radio broadcasts and websites, independent of churches and convinced by their reading of the Bible that the end of the world will begin May 21, 2011." End of Days in May (MSNBC) Apocalypse Soon: Christian Movement Says 5/21/11 (CBS News) Hundreds of Google News articles on End of World in May 2011 (Google News) I love the NPR.com article by Barbara Hagerty "Is The End Nigh? We'll Know Soon Enough." She interviews several true believers and reports on the mega-million-dollar Family Radio network, one of the many "news" outlets we have to thank for providing us such valuable interpretations of the 2,000-year-old text. "People need to … [Read more...]
Go Wash Clothes, This is Against Islam!

A group of Egyptian men yelled, "Go wash clothes! This is against Islam!" while attacking a group of women this week who were part of a demonstration urging Egypt to give women a voice in building its future. Thus a traditional worldview delivers a stinging slap to the women of Egypt who are aspiring for a more modern way of being treated. The violent opposition these women faced suggests that Egyptian women may have to fight their own revolution to achieve equal rights. “We fought side by side with men during the revolution, and now we’re not represented,” said Passat Rabie, a young woman who came with friends, after men aggressively dispersed the protest. “I thought Egypt was improving, that it was becoming a better country. If it’s changing in a way that’s going to exclude women, then what’s the point? Where’s the democracy?” The demonstrators, who gathered in Tahrir Square—the epicenter of the revolution—had much to complain about: The military council … [Read more...]
Why Does Democracy and Freedom in Egypt Leave Out Women?

Here we have a very clear situation where an integral understanding brings clarity into an otherwise utterly puzzling situation. The question we are solving for is this: Why Does Democracy and Freedom in Egypt Leave Out Women? As the world witnessed, throughout the protests in February, women were at the forefront. Their courage and sacrifice of the Egyptian women was equal to the Egyptian men. Yet, during the protests they not emphasize gender rights in a country where women have faced rampant discrimination and received little legal protection against widespread violence and sexual abuse. Egyptian women were careful not to display any intention of wanting to advance one groups rights over those of another. Why? "We did not speak of our gender rights during these protests because it was not the right time. We spoke for the political and social rights of all Egyptians. If we were to campaign for our rights as women in parallel with the revolutions national goal, that would … [Read more...]
Moving 10-Minute Video Collage of Egyptian Revolution

What do you think about this video? Share your perspective (below). Or click here to read more Integral Thinkers articles about leadership, current events, or to read Google News articles about Protests in the Middle East. … [Read more...]
The Shirtless Dancing Guy Theory of Leadership
Derek Sivers gave this brief presentation at the TED Conference to a standing ovation. It's brilliant in both its humor and simplicity. Watch the video first. Then, if you want, you can read the transcript below. Transcript of Derek Sivers video: If you've learned a lot about leadership and making a movement, then let's watch a movement happen, start to finish, in under 3 minutes, and dissect some lessons: A leader needs the guts to stand alone and look ridiculous. But what he's doing is so simple, it's almost instructional. This is key. You must be easy to follow! Now comes the first follower with a crucial role: he publicly shows everyone how to follow. Notice the leader embraces him as an equal, so it's not about the leader anymore - it's about them, plural. Notice he's calling to his friends to join in. It takes guts to be a first follower! You stand out and brave ridicule, yourself. Being a first follower is an under-appreciated form of leadership. The first … [Read more...]
Hundreds of Thousands Protest Across Arab the World

A picture is worth a thousand words. Click photo to enlarge full screen. Iraqi riot police officers prevent anti-government protesters from entering the heavily guarded Green Zone during a demonstration in Baghdad, Iraq, Friday, Feb. 25, 2011. Thousands marched on government buildings and clashed with security forces in cities across Iraq on Friday, in the largest and most violent anti-government protests here since political unrest began spreading in the Arab world several weeks ago. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban) See Associated Press article and gallery of stunning photos here. … [Read more...]
Gaddafi’s son warns: “We will fight to the last Bullet”

Muammar Gaddafi's son Saif Gaddafi warns protesters of "rivers of blood" in live televised broadcast, stating: "Libya is not Egypt, it is not Tunisia... Muammar Gaddafi will remain and things will go back to the way they were by using any means possible... We will fight to the last Bullet". Wow, the Gaddafi's are giving Autocratic Leadership a bad name! … [Read more...]
Internet-Fueled Revolutions in 12 Countries… and Counting

Have you been following the articles about how these young, new-breed leaders are using modern technology, especially social media, to start movements and transform their communities and countries? Inspired by Tunisia, Egyptian youth, armed only with internet skills, planned, executed, and succeeded in starting a revolution that ousted a 30-year authoritarian regime. And if you've been following the headlines, their success has inspired courageous groups across the Middle East and into North Africa. What began in Tunisia spread to Egypt, Yemen, Jordan, Algeria, Bahrain, and now Libya, Morocco, Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. Pictured on the right is Ahmed al-Omran, a 22-year-old Saudi university student, checks his Internet blog on his laptop computer at a cafe in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. He represents tens of thousands of young people in the Middle East and North Africa that are active on Facebook, Twitter and Google. Technology poses big threats for autocratic and … [Read more...]
Egypt’s Stage of Development (Modern lens)

Speaking about the need for a leader popularly elected in free and fair elections, former U.S. National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski states, "Egypt is now at a stage of development in which it is reasonable and expected by the population.” The term "development" means many things to many people, and it is — as Ken Wilber has suggested — the "backbone" of integral theory. As I blogged about in a recent posts (Worldviews in Conflict and New-Breed Leader Uses Facebook to Start Egypian Revolution), there appears to be a clear shift occurring in Egypt in particular and in this region in general as development accelerates and the Modern worldview increasingly seeps in and displaces the longstanding Traditional and Imperial worldviews so common in this region. As I often discuss with my students of Integral Leadership, there is an opportunity here for us to notice how people with different worldviews (and preferred values dialects and leadership styles) frame these … [Read more...]
New-Breed Leader Uses Facebook to Start Revolution

The "leader" of the Egyptian Revolution, Wael Ghonim states, "The time to negotiate with the Mubarak government has passed." Wael Ghonim, a 30-year-old Egyptian Google marketing executive, used a Facebook page (along with other modern methods) to start a protest-turned-revolution that aims to overthrow the Egyptian government. Integral thinkers see this spectacular incident as representative of a much larger pattern, possibly even a new emergent form of leadership. Young leaders with modern and postmodern worldviews who deeply care about social issues are using cutting-edge communication tools to challenge traditional leaders and institutions. Many parts of the world have leaders (and governments) who hold an Imperial and/or Traditional worldview and who insist on using autocratic and authoritarian means. In some cases these worldviews and leadershp methods are, in fact, a good "functional fit" for the people, culture, and techo-economic realities of those regions. (More on this … [Read more...]
Another Video of UFO over Jerusalem—Real or Hoax?
Ironically, the same week that NASA discovers six more ostensibly habitable planets in our galaxy, spectators purportedly shot video (from several different angles) of what appears to be a UFO hovering over Jerusalem's Temple Mount. These videos (see below) of a glowing ball hovering over the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem have been attracted hundreds of thousands of internet viewers. The videos shows a bright object slowly descending over the Dome of the Rock, an Islamic shrine on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem—believed to be the holiest spot on earth and sacred to three world religions. Not surprisingly, there is an ongoing debate over the legitimacy of the videos, which show objects hovering over the landmark's iconic dome before rocketing upwards. Some of the videos, which include audio of the inspired reactions of spectators, can be seen below. What should we make of this long-time trend? Are videos such as these an indication of a much larger reality we should … [Read more...]
Six New Planets Found in Habitable Zone in Our Galaxy

Are we alone in the universe? Findings by NASA's Kepler space telescope are making that seem less likely. Only six weeks after it began operating in 2010, NASA announced its new Kepler orbiting telescope had helped do something startling -- the discovery of 700 new planets. Most were big, gaseous and inhabitable. But 140 of them were classified as "Earth-like," meaning they had solid masses of land and water, and the potential to hold life. Then came the big news. One of those planets was, like Earth, located just the right distance from its sun, was just the right size, and had just the right gravity and atmosphere that it could, potentially, support life Now, this week, NASA scientists have announced Kepler has spotted five more planets about the size of Earth, orbiting stars in our galaxy. These planets are orbiting in what is known as the habitable zone, which puts them at a distance from their suns where liquid water could exist. Liquid water is a key ingredient for … [Read more...]
Did Bacteria Already Clean Up the Gulf Oil Spill?

Methane, the predominant hydrocarbon produced by the BP blowout last year, has all but vanished from Gulf of Mexico waters, a new study reports—presumably eaten up by marine bacteria. That hadn’t been expected to happen for years. Two-thirds of the hydrocarbons released by the BP accident were forms of natural gas: largely methane, ethane and propane. While Gulf microbes quickly began devouring the larger gas molecules, they initially left tiny methane—which accounted for an estimated 87.5 percent of the gas initially emitted—largely untouched. Some of the authors of the new paper had reported in the Oct. 8 Science News that they found almost no microbial breakdown of BP methane in June, about a month and a half into the 83-day gusher. Rates of biodegradation in subsea plumes, where this gas had been accumulating, “indicated methane would persist for many, many years, if not almost a decade,” observed John Kessler, a chemical oceanographer at Texas A&M … [Read more...]
Black? White? Asian? All of the Above

According to the New York Times, one in seven new marriages in the United States is between spouses of different races or ethnicities. Multiracial and multiethnic Americans (usually grouped together as “mixed race”) are one of the country’s fastest-growing demographic groups. And experts expect the trend to continue and/or accelerate. (Source: Data from 2008 and 2009 that was analyzed by the Pew Research Center and U.S. Census 2010.) Many young adults of mixed backgrounds are rejecting the color lines that have defined Americans for generations in favor of a much more fluid sense of identity. No one knows quite how the growth of the multiracial population will change the country. Optimists say the blending of the races is a step toward transcending race, to a place where America is free of bigotry, prejudice and programs like affirmative action.Pessimists say that a more powerful multiracial movement will lead to more stratification and come at the expense of the number … [Read more...]
Thank God, Condoms No Longer a Sin

Pope Benedict XVI recently signaled what some consider to be an historic shift in the position of the Roman Catholic Church, saying condoms can be morally justified. After decades of fierce opposition to the use of all contraception in every circumstance, the pontiff ended the Church's absolute ban on condoms. Asked whether the Catholic Church is not fundamentally against the use of condoms, he replied that he does not see it as a real and moral solution, however... "In certain cases, where the intention is to reduce the risk of infection, it can nevertheless be a first step on the way to another, more humane sexuality." He goes on to say, "There may be justified individual cases, for example when a male prostitute uses a condom, where this can be... a first bit of responsibility, to redevelop the understanding that not everything is permitted and that one may not do everything one wishes. But it is not the proper way to deal with the horror of HIV infection." Well, I'm glad to … [Read more...]
The Future of Elite Education is Online

In Fast Company, Anya Kamenetz writes, "...if you were starting a top university today, what would it look like? You would start by gathering the very best minds from around the world, from every discipline. Since we're living in an age of abundant, not scarce, information, you'd curate the lectures carefully, with a focus on the new and original, rather than offer a course on every possible topic. You'd create a sustainable economic model by focusing on technological rather than physical infrastructure, and by getting people of means to pay for a specialized experience. You'd also construct a robust network so people could access resources whenever and from wherever they like, and you'd give them the tools to collaborate beyond the lecture hall. Why not fulfill the university's millennium-old mission by sharing ideas as freely and as widely as possible? If you did all that, well, you'd have TED." How TED is Becoming the Future of Education TED.com … [Read more...]
