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Meetups Every Weekday and Sunday at 8pm ET &
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Upcoming events
14

Comprehensivist Wednesdays: Solving for Pattern
·OnlineOnlineIn this meetup we will explore what makes a solution work. Solutions are often discussed in terms of efficiency or innovation, but most modern fixes succeed only because their costs land somewhere else. Understanding this shift helps explain why so many of our cleverest answers seem to produce stranger problems than the ones they solved.
As societies grew more specialized, problem-solving moved from local, lived practice into formal expertise. Boundaries narrowed. Each profession learned to solve for a single variable inside its own discipline, and the costs that spilled past that boundary became someone else's concern. Solutions began to be judged by what they produced inside the frame, not by what they exported outside it.
Economists have a word for those exported costs: externalities. Pollution, traffic, hollowed-out towns, anxious children, depleted soil. These are the bills that don't appear on the receipt. Wendell Berry, writing as a farmer rather than an economist, calls the same phenomenon a bad solution: one that fixes one problem by creating several new ones beyond the solver's view. He distinguishes it from a good solution, which solves more than one problem at once, accepts given limits, and is enacted by people who will live with their own mistakes.
This pattern shapes us psychologically as well as economically. When the costs of our choices arrive far away or far in the future, we lose the feedback that would have trained our judgment. We become managers of pipelines rather than inhabitants of places. The solver's character thins out along with the solution's wisdom. This is where the conversation will naturally meet Chapter 25 of Collaborating for Comprehensivity, "The Standard for All Measurements: Our Judgment," which is Fearnley's argument that comprehensive understanding finally rests not on a body of knowledge but on the quality of the person doing the understanding, formed by staying close enough to consequences that the pattern can teach them.
Our conversation will focus on how problem-solving shifts when boundaries are drawn too narrowly, and what changes when we widen them. When solutions are valued mainly for what they produce inside the frame, the key question is no longer did this work? but who is paying for it that we haven't counted yet?
Sources
Solving for Pattern by Wendell Berry
https://www.texaschildrenscommission.gov/media/hfcf3d3f/2_article-solving-for-pattern-by-wendell-berry.pdfExternalities: It's What Pandemics, Pollution and Puppies Have in Common (St. Louis Fed)
https://www.stlouisfed.org/open-vault/2021/june/externalities-pandemics-pollution-puppies-in-common*****************************************************************************
CJ Fearnley's book "Collaborating for Comprehensivity," is a unique exploration of comprehensive thinking, inquiry, and collaboration, is now available on Amazon in paperback, Kindle, and free PDF formats.- The free PDF version can be downloaded here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1bapsUhFtRDSPdAW6zRBe7omBlcghz-yi/
- Available on Amazon Kindle for the lowest price Amazon allows of $0.99 here: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CW1K18B5/
- Available as a paperback on Amazon for the lowest price Amazon allows of $8.31 here: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0D11GHC9V/
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Welcome to the series "Comprehensivist Wednesdays." Transdisciplinarity, Renaissance humanism, homo universalis, and Polymathy are some of the ways of describing this approach which Buckminster Fuller called Comprehensivity and described as “macro-comprehensive and micro-incisive.”See the calendar at https://www.meetup.com/52LivingIdeas/events/calendar/
We record all our Meetups and post them on YouTube. Feel free to keep your video on or off as you prefer. Watch Past Meetups here.Welcome to "Comprehensivist Wednesdays"
Explore transdisciplinarity, Renaissance humanism, homo universalis, and polymathy in ways Buckminster Fuller described as “macro-comprehensive and micro-incisive.”A Meetup Every Day, Every Week, For Everyone!
Join us every weekday at 8 pm or 9 pm ET. We record all our meetups and post them on YouTube. Feel free to keep your video on or off as you participate.
Watch Past Meetups here.7 attendees
Past events
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