Re: Renewing the American Experiment

2004-10-20 Thread Judi Richardson
7:49 PM To: osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu Subject: FW: Renewing the American Experiment Actually -- Brazil should not be off the list, I am pretty sure. The name escapes me, but perhaps the guilty party will surface. And if there is no current practice (practitioners) there, The Book has preceded

OST in Brazil (was Re: [OSLIST] Renewing the American Experiment)

2004-10-20 Thread Artur Silva
> > -Original Message- > From: OSLIST > [mailto:osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu]On Behalf Of > Harrison Owen > Sent: Monday, October 18, 2004 7:49 PM > To: osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu > Subject: FW: Renewing the American Experiment > > > Actually -- Bra

Re: Renewing the American Experiment

2004-10-20 Thread Artur Silva
> -Original Message- > From: OSLIST > [mailto:osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu]On Behalf Of > Harrison Owen > Sent: Monday, October 18, 2004 7:49 PM > To: osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu > Subject: FW: Renewing the American Experiment > > > Actually -- Brazil sh

Re: Renewing the American Experiment

2004-10-18 Thread Pannwitz, Michael M
Dear Chris, amazing enough, Brazil is not among the 106 (latest count) countries in which os-technology has been practiced. Have a look at http://www.openspaceworldmap.org/ where you will now find 72 open space-workers in 23 countries (I imagine that colleagues from the other 83 countries will even

Re: Renewing the American Experiment

2004-10-18 Thread chris macrae
Hi folks There's a chance that Brazil will need a 5000 open space I forget if we have a most experienced large OS person in Brazil. Briefly, whilst I may be completely wrong its about an issue that only the Brazilian church through its 5500 parishes can take to the people before global companies

FW: Renewing the American Experiment

2004-10-18 Thread Harrison Owen
IST [mailto:osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu] On Behalf Of Pannwitz, Michael M Sent: Monday, October 18, 2004 4:54 PM To: osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu Subject: Re: Renewing the American Experiment Dear Chris, amazing enough, Brazil is not among the 106 (latest count) countries in which os-technology has been pr

Re: Renewing the Social Evolution of Humanity (was: Renewing the American Experiment)

2004-08-04 Thread BJ Peters
Artur-- I appreciate your thoughtful reflections and comments on this piece and agree with most. I particularly liked your concept that there should be an ETHIC that can resonate with everyone of good mind and heart. I would suggest that this is not far from a sense of spirit that some would call

Re: Renewing the American Experiment

2004-08-02 Thread EVERETT813
In a message dated 7/29/04 8:33:24 AM, wcbn...@easynet.co.uk writes: > Oh if only we could open enough space to get rid of extremities, of left > and right I see no difference , that darn spectrum is so 20th Century: > Yah, if only we didn't live in this damn duality. Hot/Cold; Left/Right; Up

Re: Renewing the Social Evolution of Humanity (was: Renewing the American Experiment)

2004-08-01 Thread EVERETT813
Artur, Thank you for your thoughtful reply. Paul * * == osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu -- To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your options, view the archives of osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu: http://listserv.boise

Renewing the Social Evolution of Humanity (was: Renewing the American Experiment)

2004-07-31 Thread Artur Silva
Hello all: First, as I have not read the original message on the "American experiment", I would like to thank Paul to call my attention to it (and BJ for sending it). Indeed I could not open the address BJ sent, but I have discovered an alternative way at http://www.futurenet.org/korten/kortenexpe

Re: Renewing the American Experiment

2004-07-30 Thread EVERETT813
Hello, Therese; Well, you wondered, so I'm responding. My experience with lists and chat boards is that when the subject gets away from its focus, in the case of this List, the practice and processes of OS, it can become irrelevant and often nasty. I don't happen to think that a List ostensibl

Re: Renewing the American Experiment

2004-07-30 Thread Therese Fitzpatrick
I am mildly perplexed to read that someone on a list about open space would suggest that any topic a person posted in open space would be inappropriate. If the principles of OS apply on this list. . . how could any topic be wrong? _

Re: Renewing the American Experiment

2004-07-29 Thread chris macrae
space and chance to commune respect, imo chris macrae -Original Message- From: OSLIST [mailto:osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu] On Behalf Of Harrison Owen Sent: 29 July 2004 14:03 To: osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu Subject: Re: Renewing the American Experiment I guess I am with you BJ. I

Re: Renewing the American Experiment

2004-07-29 Thread Harrison Owen
some of the issues that Korten describes can't be all that bad -- after all this is Open Space. Harrison - Original Message - From: "BJ Peters" To: Sent: Thursday, July 29, 2004 1:12 AM Subject: Re: Renewing the American Experiment Paul-- I respect your opinion that this

Re: Renewing the American Experiment

2004-07-28 Thread EVERETT813
In a message dated 7/28/04 4:58:18 PM, b...@cox.net writes: > > I urge all of you to read his lengthy piece thoughtfully at the website > above. I invite you to think about and plan ways we can, individually > and collectively, create and share different stories that might renew > the American E

Re: Renewing the American Experiment

2004-07-28 Thread BJ Peters
Paul-- I respect your opinion that this is not the forum for discussing Korten's article, and I obviously did not agree with that stance.. I sent the article to the list because I believe that open space is exactly a place to discuss ways to reduce the polarization existing on the planet today

Renewing the American Experiment

2004-07-28 Thread BJ Peters
David Korten has re-framed the nation's and the world's polarity dilemma in a way that makes much sense to me, aligns with thoughts and feelings I've not been able to articulate and speaks to my heart. http://www.futurenet.org/karten/Kartenexperiment.htm I urge all of you to read his lengthy pie