ABSTRACT

Systemic change lies below the surface of transparent change. The movement of a hand, the breeze moving through swaying branches of a tree, and the wetness of the street with a misty rain are easily recognized transparent changes. Systemic change implies certain intricacies, a quality beyond mere change. In ambitious renditions of systemic perspectives, dynamic principles based on physical and biologically based processes have been applied to all kinds of systems. The idea of systemic change alludes to the property of a system-wide alteration. Praxiology can provide a means to answer the questions posed that pertain to systemic change. The focus is on human practices, specifically those forms of action taken to bring about systemic change. Human inquiry brings the discipline, healthy skepticism, curiosity, and open-mindedness of science to the pursuit of systemic change. The focus on systemic change through praxis and inquiry will unearth numerous questions reflective of the critical concern about inference.