What constitutes a paradigm shift? What cycles does a paradigm shift go through?
The concept of a paradigm shift was coined by Thomas Kuhn in his book The Structure of Scientific Revolutions to describe how scientific knowledge develops and changes over time. A paradigm is defined as the set of assumptions, values and beliefs, concepts and theories that shape a body of knowledge. A paradigm is shared by a group of experts within a domain at a certain point in time. Different domains, such as science, economy, society, technology and health, have all undergone paradigm shifts, changing what we know about the world and how we organize our societies.
Systems thinkers have an expanded understanding of paradigms and paradigm shifting. Donella Meadows (1999) sees paradigms, or mindsets, as the place from which a system—its goals, power structure, rules and culture—arises. The shared idea in the minds of society, the great big unstated assumptions, constitute that society’s paradigm, or deepest set of beliefs about how the world works.
Paradigms are harder to change than anything else about a system, but as Meadows argues, there’s nothing necessarily physical or expensive or even slow in the process of paradigm change. Even though societies resist challenges to their paradigm more than they resist anything else, a paradigm change can happen in a millisecond. All it takes is a new way of seeing.
Quiz
Well done! You have successfully completed this assignment.
How paradigms change
The phases of scientific revolutions
figure
Case study
Amsterdam’s City Doughnut
Well done! You have successfully completed this assignment.
Changing societies
Pointing out the anomalies
So, how do you change whole societies? Meadows says that the key is the anomaly stage, as described by Kuhn.
‘In a nutshell, you keep pointing at the anomalies and failures in the old paradigm, you keep speaking louder and with assurance from the new one, you insert people with the new paradigm in places public visibility and power,’ Meadows writes. She recommends not wasting time with reactionaries but rather connect with active change agents and with the vast middle ground of people who are open-minded.
Meadows also says that there is a leverage point even higher than changing a paradigm: ‘That is to keep oneself unattached in the arena of paradigms, to stay flexible, to realize that no paradigm is “true”, that every one, including the one that sweetly shapes your own worldview, is a tremendously limited understanding of an immense and amazing universe that is far beyond human comprehension.’ (1999, 19)
Even though there is no certainty in any worldview, paradigms can be useful tools. Radical creatives can choose whatever paradigm will help achieve their purpose (Meadows 1999). The humble state of ‘not-knowing’ is a point where radically new things start to happen.
The iceberg
Everything that we cannot see but still need to change
Systems change and paradigm shifts require more than what we can see. The iceberg (see Figure 5.2.2.) is a visual tool to help us notice and work on the deeper structural blind spots and barriers to systems change. It helps us understand the underlying factors and less obvious dynamics and structures that influence human behavior and can cause problems.
Icebergs are famous for being much bigger underneath the water than what is seen over its surface. Instead of focusing on problems as something that needs to be quickly solved, it’s important to approach them as a symptom of something larger.
According to Otto Scharmer, we live in a time of massive institutional failure, collectively creating results that nobody wants. The cause of this collective failure is that we are blind to the deeper dimension of transformational change. This blind spot exists not only at the institutional level but also in people’s everyday social interactions.
The most efficient factors that provide the deepest impact on system-level change tend to be invisible. So we really need to reach out and examine the mindsets, assumptions and values that influence us unconsciously. Questioning society-level issues means questioning things about ourselves. We need to look at ourselves—our inner world—preferably in dialogue with others.
Reflection
Your iceberg
Well done! You have successfully completed this assignment.
From sustainability to regeneration
Shifting the paradigm for businesses—and for the whole society
Regeneration has become a new buzzword in the field of sustainable innovation. Businesses, entrepreneurs and other actors are increasingly noticing the value of going beyond sustainability and leaning into regeneration. This is seen as a paradigm shift that aims to create a deeper and wider impact and a fundamental shift in business practices.
A leading thinker in regenerative design, Daniel Christian Wahl, sees this paradigm shift as a transition from doing things to nature to designing as nature, where people learn how to participate appropriately in the life-sustaining cycles of the biosphere (Wahl 2016).
A key difference between conventional sustainable development and emerging regenerative development is that the latter is based on a more holistic worldview that sees humans and economies as an intrinsic part of nature. Another key difference is that regenerative approaches start from potential instead of problems because problem-solving dictates a future based on past and present problems rather than being open to the entire range of possibilities. Regeneration is based on what is called ‘living systems thinking.’ It emphasizes the collective capacity to evolve toward increasing states of health and vitality over time. It focuses on learning how to think like natural systems so that people can shift their role as humans from a species that destabilizes and degrades to a species that revitalizes the living systems we inhabit (Gorissen, Bonaldi, Haerens & Rato 2024; see also Gibbons 2020).
According to Gorissen et al. (2024), thinking about place in concrete terms is the best starting point for the relearning described above, because it’s the right scale for most people to think and care about. Place offers a communal ground for people across diverse ideological spectra. Place is what people share in common, and working at the scale of local communities, cities, and bioregions is where individual and collective behavior can make a difference.
Real-life activity
Your doughnut economy
Well done! You have successfully completed this assignment.
Keywords
Paradigm shift, paradigm, pre-paradigm, normal science, priority of paradigms, anomalies, crisis, scientific revolution, mental shortcuts, human independence, economic growth, progress, creative impulses.
References
Allgoewer, E. (2002). Underconsumption theories and Keynesian economics: Interpretations of the Great Depression. Forschungsgemeinschaft für Nationalökonomie an der Universität St. Gallen.
Beghetto, R. A., & Kaufman, J. C. (2007). Toward a broader conception of creativity: A case for” mini-c” creativity. Psychology of aesthetics, creativity, and the arts, 1(2), 73.
Bergson, H. (2003). Creative Evolution. Dover Publications Inc.
Bertrand, R. (1997). Principles of Social Reconstruction. Routledge.
Cole, H. L., & Ohanian, L. E. (1999). The Great Depression in the United States from a neoclassical perspective. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Quarterly Review, 23, 2-24.
Dale, G. (2022). Rule of nature or rule of capital? Physiocracy, ecological economics, and ideology. In Economics and Climate Emergency (pp. 160-177). Routledge.
Dolfsma, W., & Welch, P. J. (2009). Paradigms and novelty in economics: The history of economic thought as a source of enlightenment. American journal of Economics and Sociology, 68(5), 1085-1106.
Florida, R., (2012). The Rise of the Creative Class. Basic Books.
Glasner, D. (2023). Between Walras and Marshall: Menger’s Third Way. Available at SSRN 3964127.
Glăveanu, V. P., & Kaufman, J. C. (2019). A historical perspective. In Kaufman, J.C. & Sternberg, R.J. (Eds), The Cambridge handbook of creativity (2nd ed, pp 9-26).
Gudeman, S. F. (1980). Physiocracy: a natural economics. American Ethnologist, 7(2), 240-258.
Kahneman, D., & Tversky, A. (2013). Prospect theory: An analysis of decision under risk. In Handbook of the fundamentals of financial decision making: Part I (pp. 99-127).
Kaufman, J. C., & Beghetto, R. A. (2009). Beyond big and little: The four c model of creativity. Review of general psychology, 13(1), 1-12.
Khun, T. S., (2009). The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. The University of Chicago Press (3rd ed.).
Laybourn-Langton, L., & Jacobs, M. (2018). Paradigm shifts in economic theory and policy. Intereconomics, 53(3), 113-118.
Madjar, N., Greenberg, E., & Chen, Z. (2011). Factors for radical creativity, incremental creativity, and routine, noncreative performance. Journal of applied psychology, 96(4), 730.
Magnusson, L. (2015). The political economy of mercantilism. Routledge.
Mason, J.H., (2003). The Value of Creativity, The Origins and Emergence of a Modern Belief. Routledge.
Pincus, S. (2012). Rethinking mercantilism: political economy, the British empire, and the Atlantic world in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The William and Mary Quarterly, 69(1), 3-34.
Rashid, S. (1980). Economists, economic historians and mercantilism. Scandinavian Economic History Review, 28(1), 1-14.
Schumpeter, J. & Swedberg, R. (2021). The Theory of Economic Development. Routledge.
Shefrin, H., & Statman, M. (2003). The contributions of Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky. The Journal of Behavioral Finance, 4(2), 54-58.
Wahl, D.C. (2016). Designing Regenerative Cultures. Triarchy Press. Revised and updated 2022.
5. Impact
In this chapter, we explore how radical creativity impacts our lives, both individually and as a society, by bringing about significant changes for the better.
5.1 Systemic impact
You’ll learn about systemic impact and the key players involved in driving radically creative outcomes.
5.2 Paradigm shifting
You’ll explore how new assumptions and mindsets shape policies and societies, including examples of paradigm shifts in economic theories over time.
5.3 Future coming into being
You’ll understand personal and collective transformation as the foundation for creating a sustainable future, reflecting inner skills of creativity.
5.4 Changing the world for better
You’ll gain insights into various future scenarios while learning foresight methodologies and how creative practices support transformative futures.
5.5 Novelty and innovation
You’ll examine incremental, disruptive and radical innovation, understanding the distinctions between radical creativity and innovation. You’ll also learn how an interorganizational approach drives creativity.