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Language and the World
LEXICON OF LEADERSHIP IN ACTION
© 2007 by ParaComm Partners International. All rights reserved.
Confidential and Proprietary Work in Progress
May not be reprinted or distributed in any format (including electronic) without prior wrtten permission of the author. Please email for permission to reprint or distribute.
The objective of the Leadership in Action program is to generate a “different
observer.” As leaders and coaches, we are suggesting that
human beings not only describe an objective world in language, but
also are simultaneously and continuously creating “how the world occurs for us”
in language. From the perspective of leadership,
this is because the distinctions we have learned in our lives are
what allow something to “show up” for us as comprehensible.
A distinction is not a definition or description. Once we acquire
a distinction, it “opens up” a new domain or arena for
observation, inquiry and action. For example, when
we learned “balance” as children, we acquired a distinction that
we could describe, but the description was not the same as having
the ability to balance.
The following is a list of words that we distinguish in
the course of our work together. We offe brief descriptions or definitions
of these terms below. However, the value of these descriptions is not in understanding
the meaning of the words, but in engaging in conversations with the course
leader in one of our programs to acquire the distinctions.
NOTE: This list of distinctions should not be regarded as complete and is not
intended to explain or fully develop what we are attempting to convey
in the terminology.
Basic “Repertoire” of
Distinctions for Leadership in Action
Already Listening
Human beings are always already listening in every moment and in
every situation for whatever is relevant and important to their
concerns and commitments. We filter what is happening or bring our
“models” of how the world is to a situation. This is
a shared or cultural “background” interpretation which
is learned and which can be changed. Its primary characteristic, however,
is that it is “transparent.” It occurs as our unexamined
assessments of the “way things are" or the "way people are” and, thereby,
as a practical matter becomes “the way it is.”
Background / Foreground
Distinguishes the domains of conscious awareness from the transparency
within which all human beings exist. Reveals the permanent human
condition of cognitive blindness.
The “Box”
An epistomological interpretation for distinguishing the domains of
"knowing" (for example, what we know, what we don't know,
and what we don't know we don't know). We are unaware and unthinking
about what we don’t know we don’t know, yet this is
the domain that appears to have the greatest impact upon our future.
See Background.
Breakdown / Problem
Problems are generally viewed as existing independent of an observer,
like the facts of the circumstances. Breakdowns are declared by the observer. They refer
to anything that the observer sees as blocking the fulfillment of
a commitment or anything that is missing without which the commitment
cannot be fulfilled.
Breaking Out of the "Box"
A way of distinguishing the paradigmatic paradox through which the
egoic mind and cultures persist. How can we escape a construct that
is closed to any possibility outside itself or external to itself?
Leaders distinguish this from “creating” a new interpretation
that includes the box but which is not constrained by it.
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Commitment
Action. Since all communication and coordination is occurring in
conversations between human beings, commitment can best be understood
as intentional action in language. See Speech Actions -
Requests and Promises below.
Conversations FOR
Coaches distinguish conversations in terms of their intention and
outcomes.
- No Possibility
Conversations that are either intentional or habitual and have
the effect of closing possibilities through being spoken as truth.
- Possibility
Speculative conversations that open a possibility and shift the
relationship with the future.
- Opportunity
Conversations that ground possibilities and provide a “structure
for fulfillment” of the possibility.
- Action
Conversations comprised of requests and promises that are coordinated
for bringing about something specific in the future. Conversations
which ground commitments in time.
- Relationship
Conversations having the intention to alter the quality of relationship
in terms of possibility, moods, the future or the past.
- Completion/Breakdowns
Conversations that interrupt or stop the action for the purpose
of either creating a “new game” or starting another
dialogue about what is missing.
Distinctions
A linguistic phenomenon that creates or opens a domain in which
something can be observed. Declarative in nature, the distinctions
we have constitute the structure of interpretation we have of the
world.
Enrollment
The process of engaging others with a focus on obtaining their commitment
to a proposal or offer. Distinct from “selling,” it
is grounded in the commitments of those being enrolled.
Generated Listening
The possibility of becoming a new observer begins when we can “generate”
a new interpretation, which is only possible when our listening
is opened. We can listen critically for example, or we can listen
generously as a function of our commitment in a particular situation.
There are many different ways we can listen if we are aware of the
phenomenon and “present” in a conversation.
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Historically Determined Future
Any action generated in a response to a source outside the scope
of one’s personal responsibility will in effect be a “reaction”
and become part of the cultural mechanism for perpetuating the status
quo.
How Behavior is Connected to How the “World Occurs”
A central claim in our investigation is that human beings always
respond according to how the “world occurs or shows up”
for them. If something appears to be a threat, we will behave however
we behave when threatened. How we respond may vary depending upon
our competence and experience, but leaders observe that there is
always a correlation between what we are doing and how we see our
reality. This opens the possibility for changing our actions or
behavior by first changing our interpretation of the world.
How We See the Future
Leaders and coaches show us that we normally look at the future
as something that can be predicted based on our past experience
and that most of us will organize our actions and strategies to
cope with or succeed given the future we anticipate. Leaders and
coaches allow us to see that we have choices in how we interpret
and relate to the world, including the future.
Internal Conversations
Talking to oneself. The “little voice” in the back of
our heads.
Interpretations
Our interpretation of the world occurs as the narrative we have
to account for what we are observing and experiencing. This is necessary
for there to be a historical reality. If genuine change is to occur,
leaders must develop the capacity for creating new interpretations
of everyday events that, while consistent with the past, are not
limited by it.
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Listening / Hearing
Listening is the human capacity for interpreting a “world.”
Hearing is a biological phenomenon. We can all hear the same words
in a conversation, but have different interpretations of what is
meant and respond differently depending upon what is “listened”
in a conversation. Listening involves much more than processing
information (not just hearing).
Moods
Common, everyday and universal phenomena that are “triggered” background
conversations that, among other things, automatically form a predisposition
to the future. Moods are a context for observing and experiencing
the world.
Paradigms
Paradigms are usually designed as our models of the world. More
specifically, these are background phenomena that are linguistic
in nature and are transparent. Paradigms are background interpretations
of the world that form the boundaries of our thinking. Consider
the distinctions between the models we can think and the structures
of thinking that are doing the modeling.
Possibility
A possibility can be anything we can imagine and commit to as possible
that is outside our reality. If it can be proven, it is not a possibility:
it is an example (and, therefore, an option). Possibilities are
created. A powerful place to stand from which to observe what's
missing in our world.
Relationship
Whether between two people or a team or an entire organization,
coaches distinguish relationship as the foundation for all social
accomplishment.
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Resistance
The means by which we cause the persistence of something. The primary
factor blocking creativity and blinding us to "what is".
Consequence of self-referentiality.
Speaking and Listening
Leaders and coaches distinguish speaking and listening as the medium
in which we exist and function as human beings. This means more
than simply speaking and listening to words, but the phenomenon
of cognition from the point of view of language. We are using language
in the broadest sense. We are “languaging” beings and
are blind to anything that does not occur for us in the context
of some linguistic distinction and interpretation.
Speech Actions
Originally distinguished by Austin in the 1940s, performative verbs
constitute actions that alter how we create reality in language.
These are distinct from verbs that describe action.
- Assessments
A point of view that is neither true nor false. Commitment to
provide grounding or rationale if requested to do so.
- Assertions
A statement that may be “true or false.” Commitment
that what is asserted can be witnessed and measured by a third-party
observer.
- Declarations
Commitment that something is the case because I say so. Some declarations
require social agreement or authority, others do not. Assessments
are a particular kind of declaration.
- Promises
Commitment to satisfy some condition of satisfaction by a specific
time in the future.
- Requests
Commitment to receive (accept) some conditions of satisfaction
by a specific time in the future.
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