society

Ethics in corporate training

Any process carried out by more than one human is a social process. One could make the observation that organically, every social process has evolved ethics surrounding the activities of the process. Ethics have the role of lubricating the process and ensuring better overall human benefit. Here are some examples in no particular order:

1. Netiquette
2. Craftsmanship
3. The Hippocratic Oath

(In my opinion, these examples are manifestations of ethics, in specific socio-professional settings).

Now since ethics play such an obviously important role in ensuring process quality, why aren't they an indivisible part of corporate training?

This is not a blog post

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This is my participation in Google bombing and armchair terrorism.

Since the point of the exercise is to link the word Egypt with a specific site, I guess it makes sense to talk about my (first) country. NOTE: Googling the word "Egypt" does not yield the desired results.

Egypt is going through a crisis. The majority of its people are illiterate or very badly educated. As a result, they are unable to make informed decisions. Instead of a sense of civic responsibility, Egyptians exhibit irrational allegiances to whatever promises brighter futures: religious sectarism, excessive capitalism, or just plain conservatism.

The awareness of nations

We are living in an age where societies need to have self-awareness. It is no longer sufficient to react on instinct, tradition, or habit. Society, as a problem-solving entity, needs to know its own strengths and weaknesses in order to survive and succeed in the globally connected world. And for this it needs to face its own behaviour critically and make rational decisions for self-improvement.

Many features of society will be questioned by this new awareness:

Freedoms

Our conception of freedom is self-indulgent. Look at your role model, and see what they've done with their freedom.

Here are some freedoms that are worth fighting for, imho:

Freedom from greed
Freedom from lust
Freedom from envy
Freedom from sloth
Freedom from vanity
Freedom from addictionsssssssssss
Freedom from depression, paranoia, schizophrenia
Freedom from boredom
Freedom from fear
Freedom from hate
Freedom from evil

----

Freedom from the self

The US from underdog to topdog

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Every country has some greatness, and some weakness. I think everyone (including perhaps their own citizens) feels love/hate for the US: love in some respects, resentment in others.

I think the core of the dilemma comes from this chief American trait: the underdog. It is a country designed so that anyone, from any background, can achieve success, thus defying the millenia-old hierarchical social systems, from priesthoods to kingdoms to caste systems. This trait is intimately linked to America's origins as immigrants who fled the harsh conditions of European life at the time. Thus the all-important concept of freedom, to help achieve this success. And indeed, the US has produced immense progress, primarily for itself, that has enhanced our standard of living worldwide. Respect, admiration and gratitude.

Cooperation by mutual need

From a phone conversation with Ammar.

For nodes in a network to collaborate successfully, it helps that there be a mutual need between them. The need can be for resources, skills, experience, or reach into the other node's subnetwork. Note how a "need" that is expressed to the Other implies self-awareness, self-honesty and transparency. These qualities may be some of the pre-requisites for collaboration.

What happens to the cooperation when the need is fulfilled? That's not a good question. As with any system that grows, the nodes' needs keep evolving as well, and it is up to the partners to make sure they still fulfill the evolving needs of their partners, if they still need their partners.

The myth of scarce resources

What if the founding economic principle of the scarcity of resources turned out to be a myth, an unverifiable assumption? The fact that technology hasn't learned yet how best to extract energy from our environment (the universe at large) isn't a proof in itself. The only conclusion is that there is a constant momentary scarcity of resources, brought about by humans onto themselves, as if under the spell of a self-fulfilling prophecy.

But the principle of scarcity has important consequences. It establishes the legitimacy of competition as the higher behavioural value at all levels of the individual and society, at the expense of its dual, cooperation. Indeed, the all-importance of competition is currently being questioned by economic scientists and game theorists.

Faith, overlooked human quality

Faith is a powerful human force, always at work even without the awareness of its agents. Like reason or creativity, faith is a human quality that shapes the behaviour of individuals and of societies.

In the western world, faith is commonly regarded as irrational, and discarded altogether from social or psychological discourse. Canadian philosopher and humanist John Ralston Saul, in his social critique entitled On Equilibrium, argues that democratic society must progress by balancing the essential human qualities or forces, to reach global justice with individual freedom. The qualities that he cites are: common sense, ethics, imagination, intuition, memory, and reason. He argues that reason has been the predominant quality in the West, leading to the tyranny of that trait at the expense of loss of balance with other qualities. A humanist message indeed.

The Internet, mirror to your thoughts

Try this: choose a crazy thought you've been keeping to yourself and google its keywords. You'll be surprised to find people having actually written about it!

It keeps happening to me. For a few months I've been thinking about ambiguity. A few days ago it hit me that it can be a powerful compression technique. So I googled "ambiguity compression" and got some interesting results, notably an article about Loglan, a synthetic language designed to eliminate ambiguity, and a Cyber conference paper regarding ambiguity as an artistic expression tool. Right on!

This phenomenon reinforces my belief that

Egypt, 2006 Africa Cup winner

National causes are a mysterious force. This year, the African soccer tournament rallied Egyptians from all walks and both genders. And we won, just a few minutes ago, after penalty shots that were undoubtedly agonizing for the players and the public. The explosion of emotions in the streets is a testimony to the tension/relief cycle I see in most human processes.

I've been indifferent towards those mob reactions since I became aware of them. I'm starting to change my mind, however. Although I'd like to remain detached, the togetherness created by these events is a immensely powerful force, much more volatile than rationality, and that can be put to good use (or bad) if understood. And it has been used throughout history, by leaders and organizations, whether consciously or not. That's from the observer point of view.

From the participant point of view,

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