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COMMUNITIES (Types of Human

From glossaLAB
Charles François (2004). COMMUNITIES (Types of Human, International Encyclopedia of Systems and Cybernetics, 2(1): 520.
Collection International Encyclopedia of Systems and Cybernetics
Year 2004
Vol. (num.) 2(1)
ID 520
Object type Human sciences

During its 1998 Conversations, the Fuschl Group strongly felt the need to establish clear distinctions between different types of human communities in history , in our present time and, possibly, in the future.

This need appeared in connection with the general aim to reach a better understanding of the ways toward the instauration of harmonized evolutive human communities, that could avoid through generally participative design the tragic political and social disasters of the past and the present.

After an extended debate the following typology of human societies was tentatively established. The typology is evolutive, as the Group understands that there is a progressive (but also at times catastrophically discontinuous) transition from one type to the next one.

Such an evolution seems to be irreversible, but this cannot be guaranteed.

Traditional Community: A closed, stable system where the individual's identity is determined by a collective identity rooted in transmitted myths, values , norms , and rites .

Examples are clans and tribes, agrarian villages, religious communities.

This has been the dominant type until it became deeply eroded by the technical and demographic transformation of the two last centuries.

Surrogate Community: A closed , unstable system , artificially created to attract and satisfy disenfranchised individuals yearning for community through imposed norms and values .

Examples are proselitic ideologized groups , fundamentalist religious groups , religious sects.

The word “artificially” should be qualified. Most communities of this type are founded by charismatic leaders who, somehow, sense the existence in people uprooted from their traditional community, of a deep need to “belong” and are able to respond to it in accordance to their own needs and psychological conditions.

Learning Community: An open and dynamic system in which reactive and proactive individuals collectively adapt to their environment .

Examples are administrative organizations , business firms, political parties, scientific research groups .

This type of adaptation is made of more or less discontinuous episodes (for example in business mergers), but are not deeply evolutive.

Evolutionary Learning Community: An emergent open system demonstrating dynamic stability by adapting with its environment and generating sustainable evolutionary pathways.

Until now, such communities are very rare, as they must initially rely on consensual collective self -organization by a number of individuals who understand how to self-organize (and re-organize) and how to do it as a way to transcendent permanent transformation in a necessary evolutive way. (M. BENEDER & G. CHROUST (Eds), 1998)

See also

Syntony Quest

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