Effective Conversational Practice LO8931

Stephen Weed (slweed@cyberhighway.net)
Mon, 05 Aug 1996 22:27:11 -0700

A quick echo of John Snyder's comments:

"First, as I was saying, we can learn to acknowledge the potential
inaccuracy and incompleteness of our thinking -- even though we may be
putting it out quite passionately....... I can have my reaction to your
passion, recognize that reaction for the inference it is and test it."

IMHO, introspection will always be a part of the public process in a
society or organization committed to improvement even a cyberorganization.
To say that anyone should not or does not reflect on the dialogue offline
is not what I presume any of us does in reality. We intergrate our online
forum to professional readings, converstations with clients and with other
associates. All part of the learning process.

In my participation, my thoughts are spurred by conversation. I did not
lurked for long since subscribing for this reason. Yes, you learning
theory junkies, I am often a kinesthetic learner in the flesh.

Certainly am glad to be part of the venue.

Stephen Weed

-- 

Stephen Weed <slweed@cyberhighway.net>

Learning-org -- An Internet Dialog on Learning Organizations For info: <rkarash@karash.com> -or- <http://world.std.com/~lo/>