The spirituality of systems
thinking
February 1, 2003
Attend any course on leadership
building, team building, or motivational training and you will undoubtedly hear
the words "human potential ... empowerment ... inner being ... inner self
... looking within ... getting in touch with self." What is this? Where
did it come from? Where is it going?
In "Systems Thinking: What It Is,
What It Hopes to Accomplish", the New Age premise, the Gaia Hypothesis,
was mentioned. To repeat, this premise says the world is a living, breathing
organism, irreducible to its parts; what affects one part affects all parts; in
the interests of saving spaceship Earth, we must change our society.
Whether we call it change or
transformation, the two are synonymous. Our society is being transformed; we
are in the midst of a "paradigm shift." How many times have we heard
that term used? Paradigm means the way one perceives the world and the purpose
of it. Again, we are talking about one's world view or religious beliefs.
If we are in a paradigm shift, and our
traditional paradigm was Christian, to what world view, then, are we shifting?
This new paradigm is actually based on
two religions: humanism is the world view of the system itself,
New Age is the world view of the process used by the system to achieve the
sustainable global environment. Both religions, basically, are built on the
same tenets with New Age holding a belief that God dwells within man while
humanism does not hold belief in a God at all. Both religions hold to system
theory-the idea that no one system, interdependent and interconnected to all
other systems, having the same infrastructure, is superior to any other system.
This places man on an equal status with animals, trees, flowers, rocks ... Ever
wonder why the environmentalists don't get all bent out of shape when a human
falls prey to the jaws and claws of a mountain lion? Or why they get upset at
the killing of animals but have no problem with abortion?
New Age thought and practice, as the
world view of the process to achieve the sustainable global environment, is
making its appearance in the classroom as an integral part of education reform,
and in many different ways.
For many parents, it is the worksheet
that comes home from school that was never supposed to leave the classroom [the
worksheet that has a decidedly radical environmental slant: man is destroying
the planet, making the planet uninhabitable for all other systems, that parents
and older people are the cause of all the ills that befall "Mother
Earth"], that causes parents to start asking questions and demanding
answers.
In the words of Chester Pierce,
Professor of Psychiatry and Education at Harvard,
"Every child in
America entering school at the age of five is mentally ill because he comes to
school with certain allegiances to our Founding Fathers, toward our elected
officials, toward his parents, toward a belief in a supernatural being, and
toward the sovereignty of this nation as a separate entity. It's up to you as
teachers to make all these sick children well - by creating the international
child of the future."
How do we get children, "indoctrinated
by their parents" with certain beliefs at an early age, beliefs that most
likely contradict those of the sustainable global environment, to change those
beliefs?
Children are very susceptible to what is
known as the "Brown Earth" or "Scorched Earth" syndrome;
the idea that if we don't change our society, we will experience total
environmental devastation leading to the death of Mother Earth-doomsday
environmentalism. It strikes fear in the hearts of impressionable young adults
and children who haven't yet the reasoning skills or years of experience to
figure out that the claims don't withstand the scrutiny of scientific proof and
discovery. Given the choice of changing their beliefs and living, which will a
child choose? Go on any school website and you will likely find links to
several websites promoting the doomsday environmental outlook. Rabid, radical,
doomsday environmentalism gives children the impetus to change. It also has the
affect of turning children into rabid environmental activists, not based on
knowledge or fact, but based on what they've been led to believe.
But there are others purposes for New
Age in the classroom. Joseph Fields, in his book, Total Quality for Schools, writes,
"Parents supply a
resource to which educators apply a variety of processes. These processes
include a thirteen-year sequence of assessments to match quality standards to
develop a graduate who meets customer requirements."
So, who is the "customer?"
Fields makes that very plain, too. It's business. Education
for the purpose of producing a workforce with parents accountable to the
school.
In state and federal documents, the
process to be used by business to achieve the sustainable global environment is
made very clear. It's called by several names: Total Quality Management (TQM), Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI),
the High Performance Work Organization (HPWO). TQM/CQI/HPWO is to the
work environment what Outcome-Based Education (OBE, aka, systems education) is to education.
Too many children are being handed over
to the public schools by parents who don't know, don't care, or actually
approve of what is going on there. What better time (when children are young
and impressionable) and what better place (out of the presence of parents) to
inculcate in children those world views that form the basis and process of the
work environment those children will encounter when they leave schooling
behind? Many Christian parents believe placing their child in a public school
allows the child to witness to other children. Most adults could not withstand
six to eight hours of humanist/New Age indoctrination. What makes these parents
think their child can?
Parents are also seeing children taken
on guided fantasy/guided visualization trips in the classroom, placing children
in altered states of consciousness. This is a New Age technique, used in
meditation, for attaining personal mastery-one of the five disciplines of TQM. Jack Canfield, New Age author and promoter of
confluent education, wrote in New Age
magazine,
"If you're teaching
in a public school, don't call it meditation, call it 'centering.' Every school
wants children to be relaxed, attentive, and creative, and that's what they
will get."
Canfield has made millions from his Chicken Soup for the Soul series
and most people have no idea who this man is or what he espouses.
Parents have learned, often after the
fact, of their children lying on the floor in a darkened classroom, in a circle
around a lit candle, chanting. All of this under the
direction of the teacher.
Parents are seeing classes become
involved in Native-American spiritualism with spirits and shamans, spirit
dances ... under the guise of studying other cultures.
All of this is New Age, exposing the
child to New Age mysticism without calling it that ... the world view of the
total quality environment envisioned in the workplace of tomorrow.
Is this the fault of teachers? Not
necessarily. Many teachers have no idea what they are teaching; they are just
doing their job. After all, they like food on their table, a roof over their
head, and clothes on their backs, too. Many are taught this at universities and
colleges, as they prepare to become teachers. But some do know what they are
doing. In the words of Marilyn Ferguson, in the "Aquarian Conspiracy,"
"You can only have a new society, the visionaries have said, if you change
the education of the younger generation. ... Of the Aquarian Conspirators
surveyed, more were involved in education than in any other single category of
work. ... The psychology of becoming has to be smuggled into the schools."
Which brings us to
another aspect of New Age thought and practice. What is the "psychology of becoming? In this,
we are speaking of such men as Abraham Maslow, Carl
Rogers and William Glasser.
Maslow is considered the father of Third Force Psychology
based on the premise that all people are inherently good, that through a
conscience evolution of attitudes, values and beliefs, one becomes
self-actualized with the inner wisdom and confidence to guide their own life in
a manner that is personally satisfying and socially constructive (the inner
wisdom, inner self, self-divination, empowerment, human potential). Maslow's theories incorporated existentialism, and were
intended for use with people who were mentally unstable in a clinical setting,
not on healthy children in a classroom setting. But in the classroom is where
they have ended up.
Carl Rogers, a disciple of
self-proclaimed socialist, John Dewey, building on Maslow's
concepts and theories, developed non-directive education based on the same
premise as values clarification: no right, no wrong, everything in flux — what
we are seeing in the classroom today; the human potential movement (of which
Jack Canfield is a promoter) — every child empowered, achieving his or her
potential; and sensitivity training/cognitive dissonance-bringing a child in
conflict with his existing belief system-used in the classroom to change
children's belief systems.
Before his death, Maslow
rejected Third Force Psychology, saying it was based on a false premise. Before
his death, Rogers would speak of the havoc that twelve years of experimentation
with Third Force Psychology had played on his mental stability. But that has
not stopped those who see the benefit of using these theories in the classroom
setting to "prepare children for the planned global workforce of the
future"-to create the future.
What of the recalcitrant child, the one
who refuses to give up his Christian world view for the humanist/New Age world
view? That child will not achieve proficiency of the state mandated exit
outcomes, will not pass the state assessment which looks to see if the child is
demonstrating mastery of the new basics defined by the exit outcomes and
benchmarks thereto-teamwork, critical thinking, making decisions,
communication, adapting to change and understanding whole systems. If the child
does not demonstrate mastery, the child will be remediated. If the child
remains recalcitrant, the child will be denied a diploma, entrance to higher education,
the ability to get a job, the ability to drive. The child MUST voluntarily
conform!
What about adult Christians, who recoil
at the idea of self-divination, that we must save ourselves, whose religious beliefs are protected in the workplace by the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)?
The Church Growth Movement (CGM) is to the churches what TQM
is to the workplace and OBE is to the schools. The
goal of the CGM being the world unification of
churches under one world view: New Age. The purpose is to move people to the
world view of the created future. Many devout Christians are leaving the
organized churches as the pastors move away from the
Christian world view and embrace ecumenicalism. Many devout Christians no
longer affiliate with an organized church but gather with other devout
Christians to worship in homes or other places.
And if the Christian
remains recalcitrant? Well,
that's been addressed, too. Peter Senge, in his book,
The Fifth Discipline; the Art and
Practice of the Learning Organization, states,
"The power of the
truth was no less central to early Christian thinking, although it has lost its
place in Christian practice over the last two hundred years."
Note here that The Fifth Discipline was written roughly two hundred years
after the signing of the Declaration of Independence and the ratification of
the Constitution of this nation. Further on, in his book, Senge
states,
"There is nothing
more important to an individual committed to his or her own growth than a
supportive environment. An organization committed to personal mastery can
provide that environment by continually encouraging personal vision, commitment
to truth, and a willingness to face honestly the gaps between the two."
In other words, if the individual is
committed to the organization and to truth, he or she will put aside his or her
Christian beliefs and conform. And if he or she doesn't?
Quite obviously, that individual is a detriment to the smooth operation of the
organization resulting in poor performance reports and eventual termination.
Senge begins his book by saying The Fifth Discipline was born one morning in the fall of
1987 during his meditation session. In this same book Senge
also states that Jay W Forrester of Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
was, for 20 years, his mentor. Forrester was very involved in building World 3,
a computer simulation model for projecting future trends based on data input.
He worked with such doomsday environmentalists as Donnella
Meadows who wrote Limits to Growth
based on the 17 different scenarios projected by World 3. None of the scenarios
came true but that's irrelevant; the idea that these doomsday scenarios might
come true plays on people's emotions, usurping common sense and scientific
proof and discovery.
The goal of all this ... people must
embrace the world views of the created future, as early as possible, in the
interests of producing the global citizen of tomorrow, ready, willing and able
to exist in the sustainable global environment.
© 2003 Lynn M. Stuter
- All Rights Reserved