Stages Of Change
Examples from history and ideas from chemistry
illustrate the process of cultural change
by Robert Gilman
One of the articles in Strategies For Cultural Change (IC#9) Spring 1985, Page 5
Copyright (c)1985, 1997 by Context Institute
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If we are to be successful as cultural midwives, cultural gardeners, and
the crew of spaceship Earth, we need to begin with understanding. In this
article I have pulled together the examples, models, and images that have
most helped me to understand the process of cultural change. I hope you
will find them as empowering as I have.
THE UNIVERSE IN WHICH WE LIVE is marvelously inventive. When it began,
it was nothing but hot gas and light, yet out of these have come the wondrous
richness of stars, galaxies, and even daffodils. The earth, in its turn,
began barren, yet over the past 4 billion years it has given birth to the
most amazing profusion of green and scaly and furry life.
Human cultures are one more step in this process, being "life forms"
made up of the most complex "cells" the earth has produced, and
like the individuals that are their parts, cultures are always in a process
of change and invention. Sometimes this change is slow and relatively minor,
like the gradual drift in the meanings of words. Sometimes the change is
revolutionary and profound, like the development of the first cities. And
sometimes it is devastating, like the impact of European civilization on
native cultures around the world.
Yet throughout all this change there are certain basic patterns. Let's
explore these patterns, and develop a framework that we can use later in
this issue to understand which strategies are most effective and when.
The Elements Of Culture I'm using the term "culture"
in the anthropological sense of those patterns of learned behaviors (including
all skills, technologies, institutions, and the physical artifacts that
go with these) and beliefs (including myths, unconscious assumptions,
values, and emotionally powerful symbols) that are shared by some
distinguishable group of people. In addition to behaviors and beliefs, the
third major element that enters into understanding cultures is the surrounding
environment, both natural and social.
In a stable culture, these three elements are mutually supportive. The
beliefs support the behaviors, the behaviors fit comfortably into the environment,
and this in turn helps to reinforce the beliefs. For hundreds of thousands
of years, hunting and gathering cultures had this kind of stability. Today
such stability no longer exists anywhere on the planet.
The process of cultural change is a dance among these three elements
- a dance with two main steps. The first step is a movement away from the
old stability. Some aspect of the culture moves, slowly or abruptly, out
of alignment with the other elements. For example, a new technology is introduced
(like the automobile or the telephone) or new ideas take hold (like Christianity
or Newtonian Physics). This first step often "just happens" or
is taken without any intention to cause repercussions throughout the culture,
but that doesn't stop the repercussions from happening.
The second step is a response to the tension created by the first step.
It is a conscious attempt to get things back in harmony either by undoing
the first step (reaction) or by getting the rest of the culture to catch
up (innovation). Most of what we usually think of as "social change
movements" are examples of this second step.
To see how these ideas apply in practice, let's look at some examples
and models of cultural change:
The Agricultural Revolution is one of the major turning points
in history. It is of interest both as an example of the general cultural
change process and because it is the only cultural change as massive as
what we are now going through. The history of humankind before the development
of agriculture, as well as anthropologists and archaeologists are able to
reconstruct, was characterized by four interlocked trends:
- slow but steady growth in population;
- the gradual spread of human groups from our origins in Africa more
than 2 million years ago to essentially complete coverage of the globe
by 20,000 years ago;
- a gradual increase in the variety of tools used, and in the technologies
required to produce them; and
- a progressive diversification of the diet, from initial emphasis on
the meat of large animals to a broad diet that included vegetable items,
like roots and grains, that required complex preparation.
How do we interpret this? At first glance, this may look like the story
of "progress," with humans adventuring out into ever farther new
frontiers at the same time they are learning to make better use of their
environment. However, a closer look at the diet changes, especially seen
in the light of what we know about recent hunting and gathering cultures,
tells a different story. Modern "stone age" cultures, like the
Australian Aborigines, generally have an extensive knowledge of the plants
and animals in their environment, but choose to eat only a few of the species
they know to be edible. The reasons for this selectivity are simple - taste
and convenience. These cultures have a ranking of foods from more to
less desirable, and when that ranking is compared to the gradual diet changes
for early humans, it is clear that early human history is the story of adaptation
to steady population pressure that required groups to move into less desirable
territories and to use less desirable foods.
According to Mark Cohen in The Food Crisis in Prehistory, the
development of agriculture was just one more step in this progression. Hunters
and gatherers seem to have had, for hundreds of thousands of years, all
the knowledge they needed to develop agriculture, but they consciously choose
not to as long as wild food supplies were adequate, and with good justification.
Hunting and gathering provides a better balanced, more palatable, and more
reliable diet with less labor than primitive agriculture does. The only
advantage that agriculture provides is more food per acre. Thus it was
only when population pressure could no longer be relieved by such previous
strategies as migration (because the earth was already covered with people)
that agriculture developed. We have been dealing with the population
explosion for at least 10,000 years!
The shift into agriculture is an example of a cultural change whose first
step was environmental (increased population leading to too little gatherable
food per person) and whose second step was primarily behavioral. For those
who lived through it, it was neither "revolutionary" nor did it
seem like a great advance. Its initial impact on social systems and beliefs
was relatively minor, with the old tribal ways simply adapting to village
life.
It was, however, not a complete solution to the population pressure problem.
Groups increasingly felt in competition with each other, and it is during
this time that "warfare" shifted from being a ritual-game to being
a serious business.
The consequences of this shift have been profound. Agriculture provided
the "free energy" and the storable/concentratable wealth, warfare
provided the basic social organizational model, and more babies kept up
the pressure on which conquest, empire building, cities, and civilization
could be built.
Scientific Revolutions A more immediately dramatic example of
cultural change comes from the history of science. In his classic, The
Structure Of Scientific Revolutions, Thomas Kuhn argued that the development
of the major sciences has been characterized by long periods of "normal"
science separated by brief "revolutions" that involved fundamental
changes in basic theoretical assumptions. During the "normal"
times, experimentation goes on within a generally accepted conceptual framework
known as a "paradigm." Normal science fleshes out the implications
of this basic framework, but does not challenge its underlying assumptions.
Historically what has happened, however, is that "normal" experimentation
has (usually unintentionally) accumulated some "abnormal" results
that prove difficult to explain within the old paradigm. As these discrepancies
grow to the point that they can no longer be ignored, the revolution begins
with an intense period of theoretical search, often involving the abandonment
of old basic assumptions. Generally, the "innovators" who develop
the successful new paradigm have been neither "outsiders" nor
well established "insiders." Rather, they are students or recent
graduates who have a sophisticated understanding of the science but are
still fresh enough to see it in new ways. Einstein is a good example.
When a new theoretical framework (paradigm) is found that can explain
the "odd" results, the revolution shifts to its second phase of
gaining acceptance. The first ones to adopt the new paradigm are usually
much like the innovator - young, sophisticated, and not yet entrenched.
Acceptance tends to be slower among the well-established older scientists,
many of whom never accept the new framework. In a number of the pre-20th
century scientific revolutions, the eventual shift was more a case of the
old guard dying off than their conversion.
These scientific revolutions are an example of cultural change in which
the first step is "behavioral" (experiments that don't fit) and
the second, response, step is in "beliefs" (the new paradigm).
As is generally the case when the second step involves changes in fundamental
beliefs, the shift is experienced as revolutionary by those who live through
it.
Cultural Revitalization A similar, but more general model for
cultural change is provided by the anthropologist Anthony F.C. Wallace (see
Culture and Personality) based on studies of change in both tribal
and civilized societies. The process begins with a drift away from some
previous state of cultural harmony, a drift that shows up first as increased
individual stress. A growing number of individuals find that they can't
live up to the old cultural expectations, but at first both they and the
surrounding society view this as an individual problem. As the number of
these personal failures grows, however, the social institutions start to
also deteriorate and the whole society begins to recognize that the problem
is more than personal.
Once the stress in the system has grown to the level that it is seen
as a general problem, it is difficult for that culture to return to a steady
state without going through a revitalization process. Wallace describes
this revitalization as having 6 major aspects:
- Formulation of a code. An individual or small group builds a new idealized
image of a "goal culture" that stands in attractive contrast
to the existing situation. The formulators have generally personally experienced
the stress in the culture, and are thus relieving their own personal tensions
as well as resolving the cultural problems.
- Communications. Since the full resolution requires cultural changes,
the formulators must get others to adopt their vision. This process usually
begins by reaching out to those who share the stresses of the formulators
and so are likely to be receptive.
- Organization. The task of those who first respond to the new vision
is generally to extend the communications to a broader audience and to
provide continuing moral support to those who have adopted the new vision.
This is a group process that requires some form of organization.
- Adaptation. As the new vision gets broader exposure it generally grows
and changes. There are many potential reasons for these changes. The initial
vision is usually incomplete, especially in practical details; certain
accommodations may be made to broaden the appeal of the vision; and the
original vision may include such things as predictions that fail to materialize,
thus requiring re-explanation.
- Cultural transformation. If the movement is able to gain enough support
within the society, the thrust shifts from communications to implementation.
If the "goal culture" can not be immediately established, then
a "transfer culture" is adopted as the route to get to the full
vision. If this cultural shift is successful, the stress experienced by
individuals declines dramatically.
- Routinization. Once the initial shift of cultural transformation has
occurred, the next stage is to establish the new vision as the new steady
state, which generally means institutionalizing it in various ways. Those
in the forefront of the transformation process may find this last stage
difficult and disappointing, but the bulk of the population is glad for
a return to normalcy so that they can get on with their lives.
This revitalization can be either reactionary or innovative in its basic
thrust. The reactionary mode is characterized by a belief that present problems
can be resolved by "doing the old way harder", and generally tries
to undo or suppress recent changes that are seen as the cause of the problem.
The innovative mode, on the other hand, attempts to get "lagging"
parts of the culture to catch up to recent changes that are seen by the
innovators as either positive or unchangeable.
In complex societies under stress (like our own), there are usually many
revitalization movements competing for attention and converts during the
time of increasing cultural disintegration. The inherent conservatism in
most cultures favors reactionary movements, and it is common for a culture
to attempt a "let's do the old way harder" revitalization as its
first response to realizing that something must be done to get the culture
back on track (sound familiar?). It is only after the failure of a reactionary
revitalization attempt that a culture is willing to risk fundamental innovation.
Wallace's description of cultural revitalization focuses almost entirely
on what we have been calling the second or response step in the cultural
change process. The first step, the cause of the increased cultural stress,
may involve any combination of behaviors, beliefs and the environment. The
second step will tend to change beliefs if it is an innovative revitalization,
or to bring behaviors back in line with old beliefs if it is a reactionary
revitalization.
Non-Equilibrium Systems and Dissipative Structures These examples
of cultural change are further illuminated by a model for dynamic systems
that applies to much more than just human cultures. Indeed, it has grown
out of the work of Ilya Prigogine, the Nobel Prize winning physical chemist,
who has made great strides in the study of non-equilibrium systems of all
kinds - from chemical reactions to biological and social systems.
Like most useful general frameworks, the ideas are simple once you get
them, but clicking into them can be hard at first. It is well worth the
effort, however, because of the powerful tools it provides for understanding
cultural change.
The main characteristic of a non-equilibrium system is that it is not
"closed" but rather it interacts with the larger world around
it. It has flows of energy, materials, and information in and out of it,
and these flows are essential to understanding the system. A river
is a good simple example, as is any living system.
We recognize such things as rivers and biological cells as "systems"
and not just chaos because there is some aspect of the system that provides
"structure" to the flow. The source of this structure may be obvious,
as in the banks of a river, or it may be subtle and complex, as in the case
of a biological cell where the structure is provided by all kinds of interacting
chemical reactions as well as the physical protoplasm. In general, the structure
involves patterns of feedback within the system. Prigogine calls these systems
dissipative structures since they must dissipate or get rid of
"waste"
energy or material to maintain themselves.
The next important feature of these systems is that the "structure"
can be dramatically and discontinuously changed by the amount of flow going
through it. Let's look for a moment at a bend in the river. When the flow
of water is slow, the "structure" of the river is smooth at the
bend. As the flow increases, the river will become more turbulent, with
small eddies forming and disappearing. If the flow is increased still further,
at a certain critical speed one of those eddies is likely to grow into a
real whirlpool - a qualitatively new "structure" to the river.
This pattern - stable structures (the smooth flow and the whirlpool) separated
by an unstable and chaotic transition region (the turbulent eddies) - is
quite common in non-equilibrium systems that are structured by internal
feedback.
To see how this can apply to cultures, think of what might happen to
a culture if the information flow about the world around it is steadily
increased. At a low level of information, a smooth provincialism can prevail.
As the flow increases, some of this provincialism will be challenged, producing
unstable fluctuations between curiosity and defensiveness. As the flow increases
still further, the provincialism may be replaced by a stable cosmopolitanism.
We need to take this description one more step, however, to really see
its usefulness. It turns out that in many non- equilibrium systems there
are alternative stable structures. That is, at some given flow the
system has more than one potential structure it can "choose" from.
How does it choose which structure to lock into? Prigogine's answer is that
seemingly small fluctuations can play a major role at this crucial point.
Let's go back to the bend in the river. Suppose there are two places
in that bend where a stable whirlpool could form, but once a whirlpool
forms in one place, it prevents the other one from forming. As the flow
increases, which will the river choose? It all depends on which place "just
happens" to have an eddy in it as the flow gets strong enough to amplify
that eddy into a full whirlpool.
In the same way we can return to our provincialism example and recognize
that there are other potential outcomes besides cosmopolitanism. The result
of a high level information flow might be the development of a paranoid
totalitarianism or it might result in the complete collapse of the original
culture. Seemingly minor events during the unstable phase of curiosity and
defensiveness can be "blown out of proportion" and have a major
impact on the subsequent history.
Likewise, consider a hunting and gathering culture that feels the population
pressure that could lead it into agriculture. It also has other choices,
the major ones having been nomadic herding or continued hunting and gathering,
but in a less desirable territory (e.g. the eskimos). At the decision point,
small events (such as a good or bad growing season during a crucial year)
may shift the balance one way or another, but once launched down a path
it becomes much harder to shift to another track.
The essential feature here is that the unstable phase of a non-equilibrium
system contains a lot of unstructured energy that is available to amplify
small events into major changes. This can only happen, however, if that
small event is a "seed" of one of the potential structures that
the system could settle into. As a non-equilibrium system moves from
one stable structure to another, its history is determined by which "seeds"
are available to be amplified as the system reaches it critical "decision
point."
Filling In The Stages
We can now use this pattern of "stability-transition- stability"
to provide a framework for summarizing the process of cultural change.
Preparation Cultural history is in some ways like a journey along
a road. As long as the culture is basically stable, it moves on its set
course with few major choices. Only occasionally does it reach a true crossroads.
However, unlike a physical journey, cultures are not just passive
travelers through a predetermined landscape. During their normal times they
are constantly making small changes that are creating their future
crossroads, that are the seeds of their future possibilities.
The changes that have real impact in this way are the creation of new
pathways and tools - from new stories and ways of looking
at things to new hardware and institutions. There is no particular evidence
that humanity's basic needs, values, and even potential has changed in the
past 100,000 years. What has changed are the ways that we express these
needs and values. We do what we have the "tools" to do - spiritually,
mentally, emotionally and physically. Thus the most effective way to genuinely
change a culture is to create new ways to address basic needs. During the
time of preparation, this means getting the components of the new culture
developed, functioning in small ways, and ready to be assembled into a new
synthesis when the crossroads is reached.
The combination of the availability of new pathways and the pressure
of changing environmental circumstances will create the crossroads and the
viable alternatives that branch out from it. The alternative that has the
best developed and mutually supportive set of new pathways, that can be
most easily jumped to from the old patterns, and is most in harmony with
the new circumstances has the best chance of becoming the new road.
Transformation The crossroads, the unstable zone of a non-equilibrium
system, is a special place. It is made up of all the roads that come into
it, but it does not belong to any one of them. The lesson of the crossroads
is that we can not get off the old road and on to the new without going
through this intermediate place. In cultural terms, this means that dis-
integration always precedes reintegration. The historian Arnold Toynbee
spoke of this process as "withdrawal and return" and noted that
many deeply innovative cultures, such as the Greeks, seemed to jump directly
from a cultural phase of quietude and obscurity to one of major impact.
Studies of individual creativity show the same pattern - major insights
often follow periods of rest or distraction that permit the weakening of
old fixations.
The transformation itself is like reorganizing your living quarters.
You may get rid of some of the old furniture and bring in some new, but
by and large you will work with what is available. While you may discover
a missing piece that needs to be built, generally this is not the
time to be creating the components of your new arrangements. Rather this
is the time to create a new synthesis of your existing components.
In a culture, this transition is not a simple single step. The cultural
historian William Irwin Thompson speaks of four major overlapping stages:
religious, artistic, scientific and technical, and finally political. Frequently
there will be a variety of competing alternatives in each of these areas,
with people making the transition from the old to different potential
futures.
Individuals and groups pass through this process of transition at different
rates and with different styles. Those at the center of the old culture,
those who led the way during the old stable phase, tend to go in two different
ways. Some of these are the first to sense the coming change. If they, in
some way or another, withdraw from the old center, they may contribute significantly
to the creation of the new. Many at the center, however, will be shielded
by the power of the center and thus kept from experiencing the pressures
building up around the edges of the culture. The result is what cultural
historians refer to as the phenomenon of the "lagging center"
- the old leadership becomes so entrenched that it fails to keep pace and
soon finds itself outflanked (for example, Britain's experience during the
20th century).
Within any society there are also "learning style" differences.
Some people easily catch hold of new ideas or beliefs, and because of these
are motivated to change what they do. Others (probably most) learn best
by doing, and their changes in beliefs follow their changes in experience.
The time of transition can be a period of considerable chaos and confusion,
and at a certain point events within it can rush ahead with dizzying speed.
It is all too often mistakenly thought of as the cultural transformation,
where in fact it is the climax, the birthing, after a long period of preparation.
Elaboration Eventually, order emerges out of the chaos. A point
is reached where one of those potential futures gains enough workability
and support so that it clearly becomes the new framework, the new consensus.
Those who thought the future would go somewhere else may be bewildered,
but they either adjust or fade. At this stage the new culture has finally
been born, and the task shifts to enabling it to grow and mature. There
is a lot of cultural development, for example of large scale institutions,
that can not happen until this period. It can be a time of great exhilaration
and joy if there are few scars left from the time of transition.
The fundamental lesson I draw from this is that timing, and understanding
the stage the culture is in, are vital to being an effective cultural midwife.
There is a time for quiet preparation, a time for bold synthesis, and a
time for snowballing communications and a time for broad-scale implementation.
If we stay in harmony with the needs of the times, the process can move
smoothly and powerfully, and our efforts will be well spent.
I'll explore how all this applies to our present cultural situation in
a later article, but first some other perspectives on cultural change and
the challenges we are facing.
Bibliography
Cohen, Mark Nathan, The Food Crisis In Prehistory (New Haven:
Yale University Press, 1977).
Kuhn, Thomas S., The Structure Of Scientific Revolutions (Chicago:
University Of Chicago Press, 1970).
Prigogine, Ilya and Isabelle Stengers, Order Out Of Chaos (New
York: Bantam Books, 1984).
Wallace, Anthony F.C., Culture And Personality (New York: Random
House, 1970).
Wendorf, Fred et al., "An Ancient Harvest On The Nile," Science
82 (November 1982, p 68).
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