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I
participate in a number of Internet listserv discussion groups. (An Internet listserv
group is a collection of people interested in a specific topic. They converse with other,
like-minded individuals via e-mail messages, called "postings." For example, a
person might start a discussion by posing a question in an e-mail message and sending it
to the listserv address. The listserv computer, in turn, sends this message out via e-mail
to everyone who is signed up for the listserv. Each of these people can then respond to
the question, and have their responses likewise distributed to everyone on the listserv.
This can go on for a while as people respond to other peoples responses. Typically,
this is a very free-speech kind of thing; no one monitors or censors the comments. In this
way, an on-line conversation is created. But it is a different kind of conversation
because people are spread out all over the world and responses can come several days after
the question was asked. The set of postings on a given subject is called a
"thread." There can be several threads active at once. They go on for as long as
the people on the listserv have something to say about them.)
One such listserv that I
participate in is the CREA-CPS Creativity and Creative Problem Solving list hosted by the
Creative Education Foundation in Buffalo, NY. This particular listserv has about 400
subscribers. As in any large group of people, a few people are quite active in posting
questions and comments, while the majority of people are just silent observers,
"lurkers" or "standers-by" in listserv lingo.
The central topic of the
listserv is creativity and creative problem solving. CREA and CPS are specific, well known
creative thinking methods advocated by the Creative Education Foundation. People who sign
up for the listserv naturally expect that the discussion will be about these methods and
their applications. Usually, this is the case; but, occasionally someone will introduce a
topic that is only peripherally related to this purpose, or there will be a thread in
which people are obviously just having fun or showing off their knowledge of arcane
topics. Examples of such threads include a discussion of the recent Heavens Gate
cult suicide and a discussion of how to cook pasta.
Reflection: An
Internet listserv has all the characteristics of a CAS. Individual agents are free to say
what they want. There is a loose sense of overall purpose. There are only minimum
specifications. There is a high degree of connectivity among agents. Topics emerge from
the interaction, rise to prominence for a short while, and then fade away to be replaced
by other topics. The fact that seemingly off-topic threads emerge from time to time is not
surprising in such a system. Idea: It would be great to do a study of these emergent
phenomena on listservs.
The number of seemingly
off-topic threads has appeared to rise recently. And a few members of the listserv have
seemingly had enough of it. There have been several postings about this; some not-so-nice.
This started a discussion thread which just brought more people into it on both sides.
This interaction prompted a
member of the listserv, Penelope Kelly, to post a message to the listserv
"owner;" a person at the Creative Education Foundation named "Marc"
who I dont recall as being very active in past discussions. Nevertheless, Marc,
nicknamed "list-papa," responded back in a way that I thought was very much
consistent with a CAS lens. Penelopes posting and Marcs response are
reproduced below...
______________________________________________
Date: Sat, 19 Jul 1997 15:15:13
+0000
Sender: CREA-CPS Creativity and
Creative Problem Solving
<CREA-CPS@NIC.SURFNET.NL>
Subject: Re: calling list-papa
Penelope Kelly wrote:
>
> marc, have you had time to follow the thread on experts and >what you
as
> the list owner envision for your list? what say you? does this list
> please you? are you content with the content? does it address
> creativity? at least one list member feels that the list diverges too
> much .. what do you say?
>
> penelope kelly
> pkelly@efn.org
(written after writing the
following) I have a problem in writing this up. When I read myself back, I can add and
work on balancing words, adding more subtle meanings in the text, and so on. Ill
stop doing this, and just send you this temporary impression.
Thanks Penelope, I have all
kinds of thoughts starting from this thread:
One: the list is a community
which welcomes diversity both on content and expertise. Im not sure whether these
are just words, or also daily practice. (Would this be a thread that needs exploration ?)
Two: a community has formed over
time, like a little village with a public market place where we all meet in the view of
visitors, standers-by, etc. And in such a village, you will find relationships, dynamics,
initiatives, patterns, and so on. And for newcomers, or standers-by, it may sometimes be
hard to entre in this active market place. I would think, in this case, mostly
by the impression standers-by will form of the visible interactions, leading to
projections such as they are experts, and who am I in this midst. Also for me
writing this up in front of this audience, I cant avoid being careful with my words.
Three: Im being seen as
the creator of this list. Just, for a little while, assuming this is so, I
reckon one of the elements leading to this healthy and enjoyable continuing
community is that it leads its own life, there is no top-down predefined directing
from some party. Of course, some take more initiative than others, but it is always in the
form of an invitation.
I love the community as it has
evolved over the years, the people who partake, this feeling of welcome that I also
experience at some conferences and get-togethers on creativity and innovation (the
European networking conferences, the Dutch creativity network Creanet, CPSI, and more), it
is a feeling that hope can materialize, or optimism, its also about inspiration.
Maybe it ought to be a little more about recognition of diversity. But the
last aspect is directly connected (as a dilemma) to the idea of a crystallized community
with a formed culture.
So, the question of divergence,
to me, is an easy one. As long as we can force-fit our messages with creativity in some
form or other, that should be fine. I mean, the deepest effect in change processes might
come from stories, stories that do not show any experts explanation, but inspire the
other to invent their own understandings and interventions. So, where would we have to set
a criterion for how far to diverge in our sharings? We are all different, we have
different ways to express ourselves, and, if you ask me, its so hard to get a grip,
or no better, on how to get an understanding of where somebody is coming from, that I
think its better to leave that to some community intuition. Lets
put effort in listening and getting a grip on some strange divergence and than
try some force-fitting, e.g. in sharing what some poem might mean to you.
Is this what you meant, Penelope
?
Yours, Marc
______________________________________________
Reflection: I
was blown away by Marcs response. The sense of community-building, dialogue,
story-telling, metaphor, paradox-tolerance, anxiety-holding, diversity, no central
controller, and edge of chaos is outstanding. Marcs comments could easily apply to
any collection of people working together to make sense of something, or accomplish a
hard-to-define purpose. Wouldnt it be nice if work groups thought of themselves in
the same way that Marc sees this Internet listserv community?
Brenda Zimmerman adds
her reflection: All listservs, indeed all human dialogue groups, are different.
The degree of connectivity in a listserv is not only measured by the number of points,
nodes or agents. I think some listserv conversations, and by extension human dialogues,
have much more generative potential because they connect at multiple levels. They are not
just exchanging information, but they are also exchanging meaning-making, emotions,
spiritual philosophy, etc. Some listservs and dialogue groups appear to be webs, but in
actual effect the hierarchies that exist in other aspects of life play out in the
exchanges (for example, the "experts" and "standers-by" on this
listserv). Also, I have seen examples where listservs act as a hub-and-spoke rather than a
web; the list owner responds to every post. This also happens in other types of discussion
groups.
Some of the conditions for
generative potential are shared directedness, action opportunities, and heterogeneity.
Perhaps there is also another dimension to generative potential within a community
(whether in the virtual or real world) and that is the number of levels of
connections-intellectual, task, emotional, spiritual. Too much connectedness can lead to
dissipation and chaos, but we need enough to make it generative.
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