Mini Symposium 2025 May 28 - Yiannis Laouris
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Advancing Together: An invitation for Systemic Collaboration
Abstract
Yiannis Laouris, presented Dialogic Design Science: A powerful sense-making and action-taking tool in the Mini Symposia series. The exponentially increasing rate of change in all processes around us, combined with the rapidly growing complexity of sociotechnical problems, makes the need for the effective management of large-scale systems an acute emergency. We argue that, in the foreseeable future, neither crowdsourcing (i.e., distributed, parallel processing) or direct democracy nor research that aims to help us humans manage or significantly increase our biological intellectual capacity will allow any single human to tackle alone the complex challenges faced today. Furthermore, we lack sufficient scientifically or empirically validated tools or methodologies to assist large groups of individuals in utilizing their collective intelligence and wisdom. To make sense of and manage the complexity of our world, we rely enormously on computers. Computers can collect, analyze and present data in forms that help us make sense of the world. However, as the singularity is approaching, we ought to accentuate the difference between intelligence and wisdom, between a solution that is optimal and a solution that serves us to sustain whatever makes us humans. In this presentation, the author will exemplify why and how the science of dialogic design and its co-laboratories of democracy process can be utilized to engage diverse stakeholders (i.e., people from all walks of life) in authentic, highly democratic dialogues. The most outstanding contribution of this branch of systems science is that the transition from the cognitive part (making sense and envisioning solutions) to taking action happens automatically. Participants are always willing to assume some kind of responsibility and take action.
Short Bio
Yiannis Laouris is the Lead Scientist and Chair of Future Worlds Center in Cyprus. He joined ISSS for the first time in 2004 during the Crete conference on the invitation of Kenneth Baush and Alexander Christakis, where he presented the peace and conflict work conducted in Cyprus between 1994 and 2004. He and Marios Michaelides, along with several Turkish speaking Cypriots, played a key role in creating an embryonic peace movement using Interactive Management as introduced by Benjamin Broome.