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Simpler Way [Hardcover]

Margaret J. Wheatley , Myron Kellner-Rogers
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 168 pages
  • Publisher: Berrett-Koehler; First Edition First Printing edition (1 Sep 1996)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1881052958
  • ISBN-13: 978-1881052951
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 21.1 x 2.3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 909,682 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Margaret J. Wheatley
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Product Description

Product Description

Downsizing didn't produce the increase in productivity many companies expected. The reason, the authors of this text argue, is that we are still expecting human qualities from mechanistic structures - the way we develop organizations depends heavily on how we organize our lives. Drawing on the work scientists, philosophers, poets, novelists, spiritual teachers and colleagues, the authors search for new ways of relating life and the process of evolution to explore how organizing activities occur. They present a different world view that could help us create organizations that thrive. The book examines five themes - play, orga nization, self, emergence and coherence and challenges many assumptions about life, organizations and change. The Newtonian model of the world and organizations, and the Darwinian notion of survival of the fittest are tackled head-on: life isn't based on experimentation, relationships and diversity.

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Life is creative. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
25 of 25 people found the following review helpful
By Alexander Kjerulf VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
This book by Margaret Wheatley is without a doubt the most beautiful and unconventional business-related book I've ever read. It conveys it's message not only through prose, but also in poems and photographs.

And the message itself is simple and beautiful, namely that:
There is a simpler way to organize human endeavour. It requires a new way of being in the world. It requires being in the world without fear. Being in the world with play and creativity. Seeking after what's possible. Being willing to learn and to be surprised.

So what is this simpler way?

The book will tell you what it's not: It's not the world view fostered in Darwinism, that the world is a cruel place, in which only the strongest can thrive. This world view has been prevalent since Darwin.

And it's not mechanistic and reductionist either. According to this book, systems are irreducible. You cannot understand or predict a system by looking at it's components. The properties of the system are emergent, and only manifest themselves in the system. They are not present in the seperate components.

So they argue that the common western metaphor for life today, ie. "life as a struggle", is not in tune with the way the world (and life) organizes itself. Life organizes and evolves itself through relations and cooperation. Therefore, a much more accurate metaphore for life would be "life as play".

Seeing life as a game could have many implications for the way we live and organize our endeavours, but the principal promise of such a world view, is that it can make life easier and more fun.

The traditional view is that life is hard. Only those who work hard and struggle are succesful. You must make sacrifices to reach your goals. Especially work life is no picnic. This view is very common, and after having read this book, I'm convinced that it's totally false - or rather, it's true, but only because we make it true by believing that it's true.

The whole book is eminently quotable. Almost every paragraph holds succinct, interesting nuggets of information, presented in a simple but thought-provoking way. Here's an example:
We live in a world where attraction is ubiquitous. Organization wants to happen. People want their lives to mean something. We seek one another to develop new capacities. With all these wonderful and innate desires calling us to organize, we can stop worrying about designing perfect structure or rules. We need to become intrigued by how we create a clear and coherent identity, a self that we can organize around.

The whole book is like that, and I can't recommend it highly enough. Read it!

If I may suggest an equally untraditional companion, consider seeing Koyaanisqatsi by Godfrey Reggio. This is a movie with no plot, no actors and no dialogue. It's simply and hour and a half of nature contrasted with mans impact on nature. It illustrates beautifully the contrast between "life as struggle" and "life as play". And no. it's not boring at all, it's breath-taking.

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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful
Essential reading 19 July 1999
By A Customer
It's late on a Sunday night and I've just finished reading "A Simpler Way" for the second time. It's one of those books that repays multiple readings as you delve deeper into what the authors are saying. It may be the best book I've ever read about creativity and organizational change, and I've read a bunch of 'em. It may change your life, if you let it. It's not "too New Age" at all - it's firmly grounded in the latest thinking in biology and other sciences. Basically, it says we are too controlled by inaccurate images of the world - specifically, the Darwinist belief in the "struggle" to survive and the machine metaphor. These two ways of looking at the world have predominated for decades now, and have percolated down into our lives, so that we think that such things as struggle, fierce competition, control, planning, rigidity, coercion, and so on, are the ways life is, and are the ways to organize our lives. WRONG, say the authors. The world actually is very different from what the Darwinists and the machine-as-metaphor people have said. According to the latest and best studies of evolution, biology, physics, nature, etc., the world is a lot more interested in cooperation, connections, synergy, alliances, freedom, etc., than we thought, and we can, if we're brave enough, allow THESE images of the world to pervade our lives and our companies.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
Most management theories and methods are based on control and competition. Managers lead through their personal influence over a certain system and they must compete with other systems and sources of influence. This is too rationalist and egocentric: no wonder so many managers are neurotic!


Margaret Wheatley and Myron Kellner-Rogers believe in overcoming egocentric attitudes in business. While most business books try to influence the reader's cognitive level, with rational arguments and informations, "A Simpler Way" tries to go deeper, appealing to the reader's esthetic and emotional perception.


Our education made us believe that individuality and competition are basic facts of life. But this idea does not match the perception that life is effectively growing and diversifying over our planet. This can only be explained if we understand cooperation and creativity to be the basic facts of life!


"A Simpler Way" does not include formulas or steps to implement a specific organization model. Instead, it subtly shows that living, real organization is not based on fear, but on freedom and diversification, suppliyng ideas for the transformation and giving references for further study.


If you believe that in business wisdom is more important than knowledge, you will probably like to read "A Simpler Way". If you don't, maybe you should read it anyway and give yourself a chance to change your mind.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
A Must-Read for Every Business
This is not the usual 'run of the mill' business book.
A first glance reveals that rather than stodgy text it begins with photographs, not diagrams, charts, graphs. Read more
Published on 16 Jan 2010 by Steven Unwin
Organisational Poetry
Certianly, the best book on management in a post modern age I have ever read!
This poetic book doesn't just touch the mind but the spirit also. Read more
Published on 9 Mar 2005 by Pete Brayne
A disappointment
Simply put, the book lacks content. Not only are the words and paragraphs rather sparsely distributed throughout the pages, but little knowledge is actually shared with the... Read more
Published on 16 July 1998
a stunning view of life
living live without the fear of western-oriented philosophical thought...messy and creative, this book was a gift, perhaps not too late in life.
Published on 26 April 1998
This one is definitely an eye-opener
Normally, I don't like books that try to describe how organizations should work. They tend to be very...how should I say this...linear. _A Simpler Way_ isn't a book like this. Read more
Published on 27 Feb 1997
SIMPLE THOUGHTS YIELD COMPLEX IMPLICATIONS
Rarely do you read a text where you find yourself nodding almost nonstop, highlighting with wild abandon, and finally, feeling that somehow you and others will be transformed by... Read more
Published on 17 Nov 1996
A book with which to launch an exploration

A Simpler Way is a beautiful object as well as being a lovely book. It's engaging cover photo, the texture of the paper, the size of the pages, the open and clean use of white... Read more

Published on 16 Oct 1996
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