One-eyed kings
Most failed entrepreneurial ventures and other creative efforts don’t make it for the simple reason that the people behind them literally can’t see the thing they’re trying to come to terms with. It isn’t that we can’t see anything at all, in fact the problem is that because we can see so much, we imagine that we see it all.
We’re so accustomed to being overwhelmed by information that we don’t even notice the fact we can hardly see past the ends of our noses. We suffer from a form of ’sighted blindness’ that lets us imagine we see forests and landscapes when it’s really all just more trees.
“If you are really curious about the future, just study the present. What we ordinarily see is really what appears in the rearview mirror. What we ordinarily think of as the present is really the past. This habit of seeing back one stage when thinking that one is looking at the present is an age-old human habit.”
Marshall McLuhan
In this digitally mediated post-web era, we face a new sort of business reality that radically challenges prior notions of what is what, when is when, who is who, and why is why.
We’re now faced with a need to develop and extend our capacities for abstraction in ways that push the limits of current understanding to a place where meaning and message form a singular, compressed, indivisible, complex whole. This is a place where conventional ideas of individuality and identity are at the same time destroyed and re-invented.
“The instantaneous world of electric information media involves all of us, all at once. Ours is a brand-new world of all-at-onceness. Time, in a sense, has ceased and space has vanished: we now live in a global village of our own making, a simultaneous happening.”
Marshall McLuhan
New “rules” are needed: The key to innovating, leading, and thriving in this abstract and inherently malleable (read: chaotic) context is to develop an extreme facility with ambiguity and uncertainty.
It’s the nature of ambiguity and uncertainty to insist on defying conventional thinking about identity and persistence. It demands that entrepreneurs, innovators, and business leaders alike become skilled at what can be thought of as “trying to bite your own teeth,” a feat that requires the ability to interact and participate within our world in uncharted ways that call for sometimes entirely new forms of imagination and experimentation.
“The meaning of meaning is meaning.”
Marshall McLuhan
Coming to terms with a ‘contingent present’ is no trivial task. Nowhere have I come across anyone as insightful and articulate about the nature and implications of a digitally mediated post-web world than in good friend and sometime colleague Eric McLuhan.
Eric does an excellent job of setting the stage and laying out the basic principles of the post-web digital era for entrepreneurs, innovators, and leaders alike in a recent interview with Second Life Cable Network’s media ecology series host Kenny Hubble.
“In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is
king.an hallucinating idiot!”
originalthinking
I recommend anyone with a business urge to give this interview the very worthwhile 75 minutes of your time and attention that it requires.
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- Published:
- 10.25.07 / 5pm
- Category:
- Eric McLuhan, Marshall McLuhan, Second Life, creativity, innovation, leadership, media ecology, planning, strategy
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