[Neurons] 2018 Neurons #9 Short-Term Thinking as a Thinking Disability
Michael Hall
meta at acsol.net
Mon Feb 19 07:03:44 EST 2018
From: L. Michael Hall
2018 Neurons #9
February 19, 2018
Thinking is in Short Supply #4
SHORT-TERM THINKING
Another Thinking Disability
I've been writing about why real thinking is in short supply and the various
factors that actually stop thinking. Here's another. Regarding a central
time factor that's involved in thinking, there are two forms of thinking.
There is short-term thinking and there is long-term thinking. The first
comes easy and quickly for us. In that sense it is much more "natural" to
think short-term, yet it is also frequently a disastrous form of thinking,
one that can get us into lots of trouble. Children think that way, and a
good bit of parenting and teaching involves helping a child or young person
to lift up his thinking horizon to look out further into the future and
consider consequences of today's thinking.
In his classic work The Fifth Discipline (1990) Peter Senge focused
primarily on systemic thinking. In that work, he described six "learning
disabilities" which we can also view as thinking disabilities. Here are the
six learning or thinking disabilities, one of which is short-term thinking.
1) Identification: "I am my position."
2) Blaming: "The enemy is out there."
3) Reactivity: Automatic reacting to words and first impressions without
stopping to think.
4) Single Cause-Effect: Seeing things as static snapshots rather than a
series of events.
5) Short-term thinking: Focused on the immediately and not able to fsee
consequences or cycles.\
6) Pretending: Believing what you want to see, therefore optimistically
saying, "All is well!" Focus on image and appearance rather than substance.
In short-term thinking you focus on what's immediately in your awareness
without extending your perception or vision into future time and/or space.
This makes the breadth of your vision limited so that you do not think in
terms of consequences, symptoms, repercussions, etc. Today, this also
happens to be the way most managers and executives operate. They focus on
the short-term profits, opportunities, changes, etc. They measure things by
what's happening in this quarter. It is short-sighted and it does not
really give a new process a chance to take root and grow.
One problem with short-term thinking is that it privileges tactical thinking
over strategic thinking. Do that and while you may win a battle you may
also do so at the expense of losing the war. Short-term thinking feeds
impatience, low frustration tolerance, and a sense of demandingness ("I want
what I want now!"). Short-term thinking disregards that things take time as
they go through stages of development. It assumes that you can make
informed decisions about processes without waiting for the process.
Organizations often declare that a program or an approach doesn't work after
one quarter, hardly giving it time to get started. Consequently, business
has been plagued by "flavor of the month" programs for years, going from one
fad to the next "big thing" under the illusion that the solution will be a
quick fix and doesn't have to deal with systemic factors.
By contrast, long-term thinking requires patience, asking about what an
action will lead to and what will result from that result, and so on.
Long-term thinking requires much more mental effort in seeking to understand
things that are hidden from view. Some of this is consequential thinking,
another higher level executive function, and one that typically doesn't even
emerge until late adolescence. Yet many adults do not use this as part of
their thinking capacities. Some of this is about maturity, the willingness
and the ability to wait as you take development into account.
If you have ever said, or heard someone say, "I just didn't think that X
would happen!" you have witnessed one of the consequences of short-term
thinking and how it stopped you or someone else from thinking, from really
thinking something through. No wonder Senge described it as a thinking and
a learning disability.
Long-term thinking looks for the system within which an event, experience,
behavior, or program is within. "What are the systemic factors that play a
role here?" With a long-term perceived, you begin to consider the language
system, the cultural system, the economic system, the political system, the
religious system, the family systems, and on and on. You look for the
communication loops- the feedback and feed-forward loops so that you can
consider how long it takes for information and activity to get around the
system loops.
L. Michael Hall, Ph.D., Executive Director
Neuro-Semantics
P.O. Box 8
Clifton, CO. 81520 USA
1 970-523-7877
Dr. Hall's email:
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