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	<title>Tom Graves / Tetradian &#187; child development</title>
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	<description>Random ramblings over the metaphoric edge</description>
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		<title>Dimensions of a Spiral</title>
		<link>http://weblog.tetradian.com/2009/04/22/spiral-dimensions/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=spiral-dimensions</link>
		<comments>http://weblog.tetradian.com/2009/04/22/spiral-dimensions/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2009 20:06:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Tom G</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Complexity / Structure]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Power and responsibility]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Society]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[child development]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cynefin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[spiral dynamics]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://weblog.tomgraves.org/index.php/2009/04/22/spiral-dimensions/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This one was triggered by a Tweet from Shawn Callahan &#8211; the grand-master of narrative-knowledge &#8211; saying that he on his way to a workshop on Spiral Dynamics. Spiral is an interesting framework, assessing individuals&#8217; and cultures&#8217; responses to their context in terms of value-structures or &#8216;vMemes&#8217;, originating from the work of a guy by [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This one was triggered by a Tweet from <a href="http://twitter.com/unorder/" title="Shawn Callahan on Twitter">Shawn Callahan</a> &#8211; the grand-master of narrative-knowledge &#8211; saying that he on his way to a workshop on <a href="http://www.spiraldynamics.com" title="Spiral Dynamics">Spiral</a> <a href="http://www.spiraldynamics.org" title="Spiral Dynamics - National Values Center">Dynamics</a>. Spiral is an interesting framework, assessing individuals&#8217; and cultures&#8217; responses to their context in terms of value-structures or &#8216;vMemes&#8217;, originating from the work of a guy by the name of Clare Graves (no relation) back in the 1950s or thereabouts. Graves&#8217; work was a bit dry, but very solid &#8211; in fact just before his own death Maslow was about to change his well-known &#8216;<a href="en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maslow's_hierarchy_of_needs" title="Wikipedia on Maslow's Hierarchy">Hierarchy of Needs</a>&#8216; in favour of Graves&#8217; analyses &#8211; but Don Beck and Chris Cowan kind of took it to the other extreme, with a California-style gloss that more detracts from its usefulness. (The irony is that, in a disagreement over values, the two now run bitterly-opposed factions &#8211; hence the two links above.)</p>
<p>The basic idea in Spiral is that individuals can be categorised in terms of a sequence of distinct layered structures of values, each layer building on the next. (A key component in Graves&#8217; work, which is kind of glossed over in Spiral, is that the same is also true for whole cultures: people experience great difficulty when their own personal value-set is significantly different from the culture&#8217;s, as indicated in my own case in the previous post on &#8216;<a href="http://weblog.tomgraves.org/index.php/2009/04/22/natural-anarchist/" title="Post on 'The Natural Anarchist'">the natural anarchist</a>&#8216;.) The one-line summary for each colour-coded vMeme value-set is as follows:</p>
<ol>
<li>Beige: there is no society, everything is focused on the individual need to survive</li>
<li>Purple: we band together as a family to help each other survive &#8211; the family/tribe is right (often matriarchal)</li>
<li>Red: there is a Great Leader of the tribe, and the leader alone is right (extreme monarchy, often translated in combat etc as &#8216;might is right&#8217;)</li>
<li>Blue: there is a Law that is greater than any one person, and that Law alone is right (e.g. theocracy)</li>
<li>Orange: there is individual &#8216;freedom&#8217;, individual &#8216;rights&#8217;</li>
<li>Green: specific groupings have collective &#8216;human rights&#8217;, freedom must be constrained for the greater need</li>
<li>Yellow: the individual is responsible &#8211; there is no &#8216;other&#8217;, the only choice that works is &#8216;win/win&#8217;</li>
<li>Turquoise: we are collectively responsible for everything</li>
<li>Coral: I <em>live</em> connection with everything</li>
</ol>
<p>The &#8216;spiral&#8217; kind-of repeats itself after six layers: Yellow echoes Beige, Turquoise echoes Purple and so on, but with a systemic awareness that&#8217;s absent from the &#8216;lower&#8217; layers. In principle there &#8216;should be&#8217; another three layers at least, but Graves said that Coral was extremely rare &#8211; he only came across a handful of people with that value-set in his entire career &#8211; so they remain a theoretical concept only; but the descriptions of the rest are solidly grounded in several decades&#8217;-worth of social-science research.</p>
<p>The Spiral crew &#8211; aided by by the odious Ken Wilber, whose pompous pronouncements I was supposed to regard as gospel on the Futures Studies course back in Melbourne in 2003 or thereabouts &#8211; seem to think that the layers represent a linear progression: &#8220;Spiral Dynamics reveals the hidden complexity codes that shape human nature, create global diversities, and drive evolutionary change&#8221;, <a href="http://www.spiraldynamics.net" title="'Integral' Spiral Dynamics">says</a> one gushing proponent. For these folks, Spiral is more like a milliennial religion &#8211; which fits well with the ethos of that culture, I guess. But whilst I would agree there&#8217;s <em>some</em> parallel with child development and the like, the work I did with <a href="http://www.dooyoo.co.uk/printed-books/from-birth-to-five-years-mary-d-sheridan/1072718/" title="Mary Sheridan - Childrens Developmental Progress">Mary Sheridan</a> a third of a century ago (ouch&#8230;) suggests strongly that it&#8217;d be better to think more in terms of dimensions &#8211; like sliders on a mixing-desk &#8211; rather than a crude layered hierarchy. Which in turn suggests it&#8217;d be interesting to identify those dimensions.</p>
<p>One dimension is obvious even to the Spiral crew: the tension between <em><strong>individual</strong></em> <em>versus</em> <em><strong>collective</strong></em> (represented respectively by the &#8216;warm colours&#8217; &#8211; beige, red, orange, yellow, coral &#8211; and the &#8216;cool colours&#8217; &#8211; purple, blue, green, turquoise).</p>
<p>Another dimension, or possibly a pair, is suggested by a cross-map with <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cynefin" title="Wikipedia on Cynefin">Cynefin</a>. The transitions from each individual/collective pair &#8211; the &#8216;to&#8217; between each of beige/purple to red/blue to orange/green to yellow/turquoise to coral &#8211; map pretty closely to Cynefin&#8217;s domains rule-based, analytic, hueristic and principle-based; a cross-map from there &#8211; rule-based = &#8216;inner/truth&#8217;, analytic = &#8216;outer/truth&#8217;, heuristic = &#8216;outer/value, principle-based = &#8216;inner/value&#8217; &#8211; suggest that the <em><strong>inner</strong> versus <strong>outer</strong></em> and <em><strong>&#8216;truth&#8217;</strong> versus<strong> &#8216;value&#8217;</strong></em> tensions would match well.</p>
<p>Somewhere in there the systems-awareness arrives, because that&#8217;s the key difference both in terms of the &#8216;spiral&#8217; repetition, but also in the transition from Green to Yellow &#8211; Orange is always looking for some &#8216;other&#8217; to &#8216;win&#8217; from in a win/lose &#8216;game&#8217;, and Green is still looking for some &#8216;other&#8217; to blame, but Yellow and Turquoise recognise that there <em>is</em> no &#8216;other&#8217;, there&#8217;s only &#8216;us&#8217;. So the key tension that is see there is one of <em><strong>&#8216;rights&#8217;</strong> versus <strong>responsibilities</strong></em>: everywhere before Yellow there&#8217;s an endless assertion of some form of &#8216;right&#8217; &#8211; survival is right, family is right, the ruler is right, the Law is right, individual rights, human rights; from Yellow on there&#8217;s an awareness that &#8216;rights&#8217; are a delusion, only responsibilities are real.</p>
<p>And another, perhaps more subtle dimension &#8211; maybe even a pair of them, though I can&#8217;t quite grasp it yet &#8211; is around the notion of <em><strong>rules/ruler/ruled</strong> versus <strong>non-rule</strong></em> &#8211; literally &#8216;an-archy&#8217;, without rule. Beige is a literal anarchy: there is no possibility of rule, there is only survival. Red and Blue are both about as rule-based as it gets: one individual, the other collective. Then we have the &#8216;kiddies&#8217; anarchy&#8217; of Orange &#8211; &#8216;rights&#8217; without responsibilities &#8211; or Green&#8217;s obsession with &#8216;other-blame, which amounts to much the same thing. Then we loop back to <em>functional</em> anarchy &#8211; responsibility-based anarchy, the awareness of the the context-dependent limitations of rules &#8211; which is individual at Yellow and collective (e.g. Quaker-style) at Turquoise.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s where the ideas have come to at present: not final, by any stretch, yet enough to be clear that Spiral ain&#8217;t the simple linear-hierarchy progression that they make it out to be, but more a tension across multiple dimensions</p>
<p>I hope that helps, Shawn?</p>
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