#10 Equity❄️in❄️Complexity

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First, an obligatory picture of Finland (that I took over the weekend), because this country really is stunning.
easy sweet crêpes & lingonberry (puolukka) jam [I made from berries I picked]

Even things with thousands of parts, like your laptop, are still complicated rather than complex. Yes, annoying and frustrating at times, but still ultimately predictable once you understand how they work. Many large, technical systems are complicated as well, like air traffic control or satellite operations. While they involve huge networks and precision engineering, they operate under defined rules, stable physics, predictable behaviour, and established protocols. They are complicated, intricate and difficult, but not complex.

Complex things don’t work like that. They’re shaped by relationships, context, and constant change. Think ecosystems, families, organisations, cities. You can’t pull one lever and expect a neat, straighforward response. Everything affects everything else. One of the simplest ways to understand complexity is through patterns in nature. A snowflake, for example, isn’t random at all. Its shape emerges from countless small interactions like temperature, moisture, and air currents in which each interaction influences the other until you end up with one of a septillion unique snowflakes landing on your nose. No single element determines the final form. Its these relationships that create the pattern.

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Dealing with the present involves getting down and dirty, yes we have some form of purpose or direction, but we don’t preach it, we practice it and see what happens. We don’t attempt to change people per se, or to be more accurate, write or speak about how they should be, instead we change the nature of the system in which they act, and the nature of their interactions.

– Dave Snowden on thecynefin.co

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