[Neurons] 2020 Neurons #40 THINKING OUT-LOUD ABOUT POLITICS
Michael Hall
meta at acsol.net
Fri Aug 21 14:01:18 EDT 2020
From: L. Michael Hall
2020 Neurons #40
August 21, 2020
Reflections on Politics #1
THINKING OUT-LOUD
ABOUT POLITICS
>From 2012 to 2014 after working out the details of a self-actualizing
leader, I took an interest in understanding politics and leadership in that
domain. I figured that as a subjective human experience, it could be
modeled. We could model good examples of intelligent and mature politicians
and we could model toxic and destructive politicians. Abraham Maslow
trigger the idea and wrote about self-actualizing politics. He wrote about
what it would take to create "a good people" and he even ran a thought
experiment about what kind of politics a group of 100 or 1000
self-actualizing people would create on a desserted island.
That led to lots of reading and researching in the area of politics,
political science, sociology, and the writings of the founding fathers of
the great American experiment in democracy. I wrote the book in 2014 and
published it in 2015- long before the current political polarization that we
now have in the US.
It also led me to read biographies of several politicians---- Abraham
Lincoln, Nelson Mandela, Martin Luther King, Jr. and Mohandas Ghandhi.
After all, there have already appeared on Planet Earth some self-actualizing
politicians. So in terms of finding some high quality exemplars to model-
we have such and they arose in contexts of division, conflict, polarization,
racial bias, etc. Two of these exemplars were elected to office and
therefore had an opportunity to demonstrate how an emotionally mature person
could handle power in a way that would unleash the potential of a nation.
Two of the exemplars, however, never had "official" political power- they
only had the personal power of their lifestyle, their voice, their vision,
and their ability to communicate and inspire.
Numerous things surprised me in the study which is now in the book Political
Coaching: Self-Actualizing Leaders and Countries (2015). One is that we are
all political. By nature, whenever we are with other people, there are
"politics." After all we have to come up with ways of getting along, ways
of communicating, making decisions, allocating resources, etc. That's why
politics is also in the office and at home. Who is in charge? How did he
or she take charge? How are things decided? Are the politics healthy and
self-actualizing?
As political beings our lives are determined by our politics. And our
politics are determined by our thinking (e.g., ideas, understanding,
believing, deciding, framing, etc.). What you think of people, of human
nature, of differences, of conflicts, of resolving conflicts, of working
together, of getting along, of establishing rules, and a thousand other
subjects - controls your actions and reactions and the quality of your life.
Your politics, therefore, can be no better than your thinking about human
beings. So if you think of people as ravenous animals fighting in the
modern jungle for power, superiority, control, material goods, etc., that
way of thinking turns politics into a battle- a war. It is a zero-sum game
of winners and losers. It is a ruthless competition are the ends justify
the means.
Conversely, if you think of people as human beings with vast potentials for
loving, contributing, being responsible, being moral and ethical beings-
people who want to be their best selves and see others grow and develop and
leave the world a better place- that leads to a very different politics. It
involves a different kind of political thinking.
Maslow and then Douglas McGregor mapped all of this out in terms of Theory X
and Theory Y of human nature. McGregor applied it to business and
management of organizations. These two different philosophical frames of
human nature lead either to Command-and-Control authoritarian leaders or to
the collaborative leadership of the self-actualizing frame. One leads to a
view of government as a Daddy or Mommy who takes care of children - who
knows what's best for them, who assumes that they can and should do for
citizens what they assume they really can't do for themselves. One leads
to a view of government as a steward of the people's voice and money.
Government is to provide a rule of law so that all have an equal opportunity
to be educated and to develop their talents as they become increasingly
responsible and informed citizens.
Politics is inevitable. It occurs in every family, every business, and
every organization. It occurs at local levels, national levels, and
international levels. There's no getting away from it. The ultimate
questions are about the quality and kind of politics that we create.
Humanistic politics works from a respect of the dignity of all persons, all
lives matter, a belief in human potentials and human responsibility. It
satisfies the need for survival and safety by law and order. It satisfies
connection, bonding, cooperation, and personal dignity by providing for
certain freedoms - speech, assembly, etc. It also satisfies the
self-actualization needs by creating a context where there are opportunities
to pursue meaning, beauty, excellence, contribution, ethics, etc.
For more, see Political Coaching: Self-Actualizing Leaders and Countries
(2015) as a real book - or as a PDF file in "The Shop"
<http://www.neurosemantics.com/> www.neurosemantics.com
L. Michael Hall, Ph.D.
Executive Director, Neuro-Semantics
P.O. Box 8
Clifton CO. 81520 USA
www.neurosemantics.com
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