Systems dynamics and achology attempts to understand our world better. Why don't more people think like this? How did you get interested in systems thinking? And how is your thinking about systems changed over the years? Those are good questions. Before i get into them, let me point out something obvious, but often unsaid already: we're going to cover a very wide diversity of issues and questions. On some of those, i actually have scientific expertes because i have devoted my time to studying them,. In other cases, i am really not much better than most of the people who are listening to this podcast. I may have intuition, or, in some cases, merely hopes,
On this episode, we meet with Professor Emeritus of Systems Management and author, Dennis Meadows.
Meadows revisits Limits to Growth 50 years after it was published. Looking back, how does Meadows view the book? How much of the response to his description of overshoot was based in fear?
Meadows offers advice to current leaders based on the models he developed in Limits to Growth. Why is it important to develop success indicators, and how can they be clearly communicated to the public?
Further, Meadows explores the available leverage points to avoid the worst types of collapse at our current stage of crises.
About Dennis Meadows:
Dennis Meadows is the Emeritus Professor of Systems Management at MIT and the co-author of Limits to Growth and Beyond the Limits.
He has received numerous awards and is the recipient of four honorary doctorates for his contributions to environmental education. He co-authored the pioneering 1972 book The Limits to Growth, which analyzed the long-term consequences of unconstrained resource consumption driven by population and economic growth on a finite planet.
For Show Notes and Transcript visit: https://www.thegreatsimplification.com/episode/12-dennis-meadows