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Kevin Kelly Quotes


Managing bottom-up change is its own art.

Much of outcomes research is a systematic attempt to exploit what is known and make it better.

One of the functions of an organization, of any organism, is to anticipate the future, so that those relationships can persist over time.

Organisms by their design are not made to adapt too far.

Organizations get invested into a particular product. And sometimes the best thing is to stop making that product, even though it's profitable, because it has optimized at a local peak.

Species go extinct because there are historical contraints built into a given body or a given design.

Technological advances could allow us to see more clearly into our own lives.

The current understanding was that it was impossible to predict how something would evolve because it was a very turbulent environment full of things interacting with each other.

The great advance of personal computers was not the computing power per se but the fact that it brought it right to your face, that you had control over it, that were confronted with it and could steer it.

The most certain thing you can say about the environment tomorrow is that it probably is going to be just like today, for the most part.

The most interesting thing about change in the environment is that for the most part the environment isn't changing.

The nature of an innovation is that it will arise at a fringe where it can afford to become prevalent enough to establish its usefulness without being overwhelmed by the inertia of the orthodox system.

The organization and the environment are in concert.

The system continually has to make this choice: it can either continue to exploit a known process and make it more productive, or it can explore a new process at the cost of being less efficient.

The way that organizations and organisms anticipate the future is by taking signals from the past, most the time.

The way to build a complex system that works is to build it from very simple systems that work.

This is actually a very important principle that science is learning about large systems like evolution and that futurists are learning about anticipating human society: just because a future scenario is plausible doesn't mean we can get there from here.

We are infected by our own misunderstanding of how our own minds work.

We tend to think of the mind of an organization residing in the CEO and the organization's top managers, perhaps with the help of outside consultants that they call in. But that is not really how an organization thinks.

When a system is in turbulence, the turbulence is not just out there in the environment, but is a part of the organization or organism that you are looking at.