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      Book

      Learning to Read the Signs
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      Book

      Learning to Read the Signs

      DOI link for Learning to Read the Signs

      Learning to Read the Signs book

      Reclaiming Pragmatism for the Practice of Sustainable Management

      Learning to Read the Signs

      DOI link for Learning to Read the Signs

      Learning to Read the Signs book

      Reclaiming Pragmatism for the Practice of Sustainable Management
      ByF. Byron (Ron) Nahser
      Edition 2nd Edition
      First Published 2013
      eBook Published 1 October 2017
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351276566
      Pages 240
      eBook ISBN 9781351276566
      Subjects Economics, Finance, Business & Industry, Environment and Sustainability
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      Nahser, F.B.(. (2013). Learning to Read the Signs: Reclaiming Pragmatism for the Practice of Sustainable Management (2nd ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351276566

      ABSTRACT

      The PathFinder Lab Journal Field Notebook (Appendix III) is available here.

      It's not what we know, but how we learn. This is the key that Learning to Read the Signs uses in order to evaluate and apply ideas and facts to one's organization life. The book asks the reader to go back to and reclaim pragmatism: an activity of thought involving four parts: Investigation, Hypothesis, Action, and Testing. Pragmatism is a method of interpretation or inquiry which offers to the thoughtful business practitioner a way to better understand the reality in which we operate, to think critically and creatively, and for business people to think together to make the best use of all our perspectives and talents. Questions raised in this book include: What are the signs telling us? Where are we headed and why? Why are things going the way they are? What is our purpose?



      Examples abound of companies and organizations that have failed to "read the signs": the automobile and the financial services industries are obvious examples. Doing business successfully in the 21st century means becoming aware of the filters that modify and limit business vision in our culture. Without this awareness, many businesses will continue to fall into short-term reactive thinking. In a world facing unprecedented social, environmental, and economic challenges, learning to read the signs is a business imperative.

 This is not a how-to book in the sense that it provides ten easy answers to everyday business problems. The help it gives is much more profound. This book outlines a mode of inquiry that can be used to solve cognitive as well as ethical questions. Drawing on the deepest resources of philosophical pragmatism, Nahser shows us that often we do not even know the right question to ask, that we must start by trusting our doubts and seeing where they lead, so that we can even begin to ask the right questions. He brings philosophy down to earth by showing that a practical philosophy can call into question our outworn assumptions, open up new lines in inquiry, and lead to conclusions we never imagined at the beginning of the process – conclusions not just about what to do next, but about our larger purposes, those frameworks that give us meaning and direction.

In this long-overdue and radical update to his seminal book, Ron Nahser turns his attention to how pragmatism can be can be practiced by the management of business, government, and non-profit organizations to create both success and a better world for all.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      part I|11 pages

      Begin

      chapter 1|10 pages

      Why reclaim pragmatism for organizations?

      part II|31 pages

      Explore

      chapter 2|9 pages

      The filtered view from the corporate tower

      chapter 3|9 pages

      The purpose and nature of business

      Is it time to change our view?

      chapter 4|12 pages

      How our filters came to be

      part III|20 pages

      Interpret

      chapter 5|12 pages

      Pragmatism

      A community of inquirers

      chapter 6|7 pages

      Extending Peirce beyond science

      Diverse voices and corporate change

      part IV|51 pages

      Decide—Hypothesize

      chapter 7|13 pages

      Progmatism from theory to practice

      A PathFinder for organizations

      chapter 8|37 pages

      Pragmatism in business

      Lessons learned

      part V|19 pages

      Act: The path ahead

      chapter 9|9 pages

      The creative community

      chapter 10|9 pages

      The still, small voice within

      chapter |5 pages

      Epilogue

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