Monday, August 29, 2011

faith, spirituality, and sustainability

I am using this blog as a white board to start brain storming some of the ideas I am considering for an article to be submitted for a conference on faith, spirituality, and sustainability. This article will be co-authored by my father, Dr. Dennis, be peer reviewed, and may be selected for the Journal of Management Education.

This paper will be about pedagogy.

  • CBE is a transdisciplinary framework for education with the superordinate goal of
  • CBE is transformative in that it results in re-organizing of the students meaning making structures in addition to supplying the students with content (i.e. transmission model)'
  • CBE transcends and includes best practices from educational neuroscience, positive psychology, traditional vedic learning philosophy, educational psychology etc...
  • Barr and Tag refer to a new paradigm of education, the learning paradigm, which they juxtapose against the instructional paradigm. instructional paradigm puts the emphasis on what is taught as opposed to what is learned. Instructional paradigm is concerned with the known (content, information) where as the learning paradigm transcsends and includes content (nested Hierarchy) and focuses on processes of learning/knowing to maximize the students internalization/transference/learning of content.
  • CBE focuses on the development of the learner. development is a qualitative improvement in the competence of the learner in achieving their highest goals and objectives. transcends and includes learning in the nested hierarchy.
  • Research on Ego-development of the student
  • brain integration
  • development of consciousness and enlightenment
In this paper I also plan to show how principles of CBE/SCI correlate with principles from positive psychology, learning/neuroscience, systems thinking and living systems literature, human development/enlightenment practices and traditions.


Tuesday, July 19, 2011

dividing oneself by increasingly larger numbers

I seem to be dividing myself by incrementally larger quantities . . . but the results are not consistent. There seem to be different kinds of shrinking--which I guess makes sense--if there are different infinities surely there are different zeros. Some zeros are of a pitiful shrinking nature, others of a subtle spreading and expansion--zero after all invisibly included in every set.

I wonder what it feels like to be divided by infinity--it must be a feeling of extreme joy or despair. Perhaps the mechanics of division are worthy of exploration--there must be different mechanics if one divided by zero can give distinct and very different results.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

In Defense of Science

The last part is a draft/work in progress. I already have a different understanding of the thesis. This post essentially has 3 sections which may be better as stand alone pieces, yet they all pertain to the themes of science and of integration of life. Feedback welcome.

I read just now the first phrase of a long thesis sentence which begins, "Science dictates materialism . . ."

Science does not dictate materialism, only an understanding of objectivity and the limits of objectivity. It refers to process of knowing . . . It is a continuous evolution of theory as we compare what we conceive of to what actually is . . . a collective process of perpetually breaking through the edges of the known, reaching into the unknown; of taking a step forward and at once resting firmly on the body of evidence and understanding that came before. Without mystery there cannot be science. Without imagination we cannot conceive of the unknown and weave it into the unknown. There can be no science without imagination. Without mystery and imagination, science is dead, for mystery is its soul and imagination its brain, purpose its heart, and facts--countless facts forever being created and destroyed--are as so many individual cells of its body that live just a short time before being shed, for they are too static to live long. The pursuit of Truth and Reality is dynamic and imaginative, Science itself an ever-evolving and multifaceted lens--so many faces, so many limbs, so many senses, so much data, so much interpretation, so many models . . . it is fractal, eternal, forever giving birth to itself.

So why isn't it taught this way? Is it not the art of asking questions? Is it not a wholly intuitive process? Is it not an exercise of excruciatingly detailed honesty which requires the scientist to acknowledge every variable of which she is aware, to acknowledge the limitations of her own knowledge which impel her to pursue this new mystery, to explain in detail the methodologies employed, to present the raw data for the interpretation of others, and only lastly to tie this back to the greater body of knowledge through interpretation, such that it may serve as a cantilever bridge leading the way further into the vacuous unknown?

A few months ago I heard marine biologist Dr. Earl speak at an American Association for Sustainability in Higher Education conference. She was able to (a) come from a perspective of embodied reason (b) connect with and engage the audience from embodied reason (c) demonstrate systems thinking; and through that (d) make clear to the audience the personal relevance of oceans and (d) the significance of the individual and of oceans for global sustainability. She demonstrated (a/b) the naturalness and aesthetic value of science--the curiosity and sense of awe that led her to be a scientist and explorer; (c) drew upon scientific knowledge to demonstrate the systemic nature of sustainability, thereby indicating the systems thinking is within the realm of science, (d) connected science to the social/moral and political/economic. Thus Dr. Earl has provided a complete integration of Ackoff's 4 area of life model, and at once disproven by counter example the possibility that systems thinking is foreign to or in conflict with scientific or analytic thought.

Dr. Earl began by asking the audience questions: Where were we five years ago? Where do we see ourselves in 10 years? She said people asked her, "How did you get to be an explorer? How did you get to be a scientist?" Her explanation was simple: "Well, you're just a little kid--you ask questions. Scientists just never stop asking questions, they never grow up." I paused in my note taking for a while, spellbound as her voice filled the room with images of sea life as she managed by some magic to stir within us that sense of wonder we had for Nature in some form at some time. I was in awe as much she was--and it didn't matter about what, for to have that sense of wonder alive within you is to be awake to how marvelous--how worth marveling at--everything is: the whole story of the universe, the very fact of existence, to be observed by a fish, or sit 30 feet up in the branches of a pine tree, or see birds hopping sideways and upside-down nonchalantly on tree branches.

"We are connected," Dr. Earl continued, "Even if you've never seen the ocean. The ocean keeps all of us alive. . . . We have the power to change the nature of nature--how the world works. The ocean governs the way the world works, provides oxygen. With every breath you are connected to the sea."

"This planet is a miracle--the fact it exists at all, the fact we exist at all."

"Every spoonful of [ocean] water is filled with life."

Dr. Tucker, looked petite behind the podium far away at the front of the room, dressed so tidily and elegantly in her dress-suit as though she were a first lady. She embodied dignity, an ambassador of the sea, and something more. She was introduced, along with prestigious honors, as being a grandmother. She introduced herself as a child. Her voice--a perfect storybook voice, one of my classmates described it--filled the room, her descriptions assisted by photographs of sea life displayed on huge screens in the dimly lit banquet hall. We were at once brought into ourselves--our emotions, our egos, our intellects--and to the world of the sea, that other world that gave us oxygen, food, climate; that world which we knew so little about; that world so rapidly being destroyed through the actions of human beings.

"We need to make peace with planet earth. Right now we are waging war. There are limits to what we can do. . . . We must realize we need to take care of nature because after all, nature takes care of us. The ocean still has some places--referred to as sea of Eden. Most of the ocean is paradise lost. We have consumed 90% of big fish in the sea. The good news is 10% are still there. 50% of coral reefs are gone; good news: still 50%. . . ."

"Biodiversity is not a common word in discussion, but it should be--because we need those starfish and [she listed many species] to live."

"Only 5% of oceans have been seen. So little is known or figured out about how the machine of earth works. Micros rule--they were there long before multicellular life, and still dominate. Microbes--1,000 variations on theme, 1,000 species in one spoonful of ocean water. Another mile away, 1,000 mostly different species in a spoonful. The ocean is not just rocks and water. The ocean is alive. . . ."

In addition to microbes, larva, and eggs, Dr. Tucker was familiar with fish in the same sort of way I, and perhaps you, are familiar with strangers in the dining hall. Perhaps more familiar. "I find myself regarding fish as individuals," she explained, showing a close-up of an fish who seemed to be interested in the camera, for it looked directly at us from the screen. "They look different, behave different--every individual fish."

She explained how the fish adapted over so long without technology, how they were unable to adapt as quickly as our fishing technology, with our increasing populations and increasing global seafood appetite. "Is there such a think as sustainable commercial fishing?" she asked. "We need sharks to have a healthy ocean," and those of us who had never eaten shark were glad, and I thought of the baskets of shark fins I had seen in San Francisco's China town market a few summers back. "Tuna need to be restored," she went on, citing decline of 90% from a date I failed to take note of to 1990. I was surprised--surely tuna fish sandwiches wouldn't be so popular if people knew. Tuna, the "chicken of the sea?"

Dr. Earl proceeded to speak of other species that might soon be gone if we could not leave them alone."In all of their fishy history, there was no contact with humans until new technology."

Yet interspersed--or rather containing this grim news was an appreciation for the the oceans and all life therein, for the mysterious 95% that remains unexplored and unknown. She described deep see diving as being "like diving into a galaxy with little pinpricks of light from bioluminescence." The fish there "have eyes that can see where there is so little light--there is no sun 10,000 feet below the surface."

She went on to describe how orange ruffi are caught during mating, how some of these fish are two centuries old, how 20 foot coral reefs have been knocked down in order to capture them.

Yet alongside these descriptions of destruction, Dr. Earl's conclusion was one of optimism grounded in realism. "We have the capacity to have a different attitude. Our ancestors were hunters and gatherers with fewer choices, and their were fewer of us. Now, we can't take song birds, not mammals, not fish--not 80 year old whales, not 200 year old orange ruffis. I come from the pre-plastic-zoic," she joked. "I know we can live without plastic. I love plastic--in my shoes, my computer, my plastic bags. It's not plastic that's the problem, it's what we do with it. . . .

"We must make peace with nature. . . . We now know what we didn't know when I was a child--the everything's interconnected. Sands from Africa blow to Colorado. . . ."

She continued to speak, returning to the problems, and said at last, "It doesn't have to be that way--we can change. It's over time. I tell kids who are depressed, 'It's the most important time to be alive.' We've leveled forests and contaminated water, but it's not too late. Some remains and can recover if given time. We can measure what we're doing."

"So why should you care? Do you like to breathe? Do you like water to fall from the sky?"

"There are still polar bears on the planet and I think its our job to keep them here. There's still ice.

"Nature is resilient: if you take us out of the equation and leave our trash, nature will recover. But the problem is if we keep trashing. The good news is that we have understanding. Other creatures--turtles--know that things have changed but they don't know why and they don't know how to change it. But we do. Nature will keep going. Microbes rule. I prefer a scenario where we can continue." Her 4 grandsons, she said are a "powerful motivation to me."

"Deadzones are increasing," she noted, and listed behavior, caring, ethic, and positive actions as key to combating that. "About 1% of the ocean is protected. We have to protect the air, land, water, forests, critters as though our lives depend on it--because they do."

I hope from these notes that you have a sense of Dr. Earl's efficacy in integrating the scientific (pursuit of truth); political-economic (pursuit of power and plenty); ethical-moral (pursuit of goodness and virtue); and the aesthetic (pursuit of beauty.) (Ackoff, p. 14, 1978) What are the emergent properties generated by thorough integration of these areas? Ackoff's five "essential properties" of "good management:" competence, communicativeness, concern, courage, and creativity.

Merging the lenses of truth, power/plenty, goodness/virtue, and beauty provides a basis for competent action--action that brings fulfillment to all areas of life, extending beyond the individual to the community. Competence arises from having a clear and complete vision, a vision that takes into account its own limitations, noting the unknowns as well as the known. It is useful to make a diagram which illustrates the boundaries of the system being considered. For example, one could use a model of two concentric circles. The inner circle could contain "key stakeholders and elements," the larger circle "other stakeholders and elements," the boundary of the outer circle representing the "system boundary," and lastly outside the circle representing "excluded stakeholders and elements." It is essential to note where the boundaries are and what is excluded, for systems are complex and often nested, such that any system may be considered as a subsystem or mega-system, and so boundaries are "fuzzy," conceptually useful if one has a clear purpose and otherwise misleading--fictitious. (Christine Kelly, 2011) Boundaries are in the mind of the beholder. Thus a clear purpose and clear perspective is the basis of competence.
Communicativeness, to be effective, must be in all streams--appealing to truth, beauty, individual and material well being, goodness and right relationships--collective well-being. To communicate in a way that acknowledges each of these is to at once inform, inspire, and motivate. In terms of Shadow work archetypes, it appeals to warrior (truth,) lover (beauty,) magician (goodness and right relationships) and sovereign (embodied or holistic joy, individual and material well-being.) Or I could draw other parallels, stating that the magician pursues truth, the lover pursues the aesthetic, the warrior power and plenty, and so on . . . though it seems more likely these correspond to archetypal combinations: Warrior-magician to pursuit of truth (science) lover-magician to the pursuit of beauty, warrior-sovereign to the pursuit of goodness and virtue, and warrior-sovereign to the pursuit of power and plenty. To list these is to generate alternate options. Perhaps truthfully it is most useful to keep the models separate, but to underline the importance of appealing, engaging, and empowering the individual as a whole. The new micro-thesis, then, is for communication to be effective it must appeal to, engage, and empower the four fundamental archetypal aspects of an individual's personality, and in doing so it will active the simultaneous pursuit of truth, beauty, power and plenty, and goodness and virtue. This inspired action will be of greatest fulfillment to the individual and evolution of holons within which the individual resides towards greater fulfillment. If one of these pursuits is lost, then quality of life will decline. To communicate effectively is to express the fruits of these pursuits--to be truthful and clear, to express beauty and to make the expression itself beautiful, to be virtuous in and nourishing or good in and of itself, to participate in the sharing plentitude of understanding and power of knowledge; and to be a means of influence (power) towards an ends of plenty, virtue, goodness, greater truth, and greater beauty. Hence communication must be a ends and a means simultaneously--must have intrinsic as well as instrumental value.

Friday, March 4, 2011

Taking things for granted/mysteries

I forget that maybe, the next time I walk around the block you won't be there to greet me, that perhaps the tree in the schoolyard will become a stump, that the preschooler will graduate high school, that I will come across a new word, or an old word that I cannot spell, or one I have wrongly pronounced in the thought-voice of my mind ever since I came across it. And I wonder about the snapshots I have in my mind of things as they were when I last saw them, and I wonder that I recognize the songs of summer birds in spring when I have forgotten them all winter long and could not if my life depended on it describe that melody when surrounded by snow. I marvel that I remember the only time I sat long enough in the forest to watch the swimming shadows so clearly, that I can see the gray shift across the page, the slugs, the only half-remembered mossy log, most distinctly that fluid feeling as the breeze moved the whole forest. I marvel that I remember this pair of eyes, or those ones; and wonder that I avoid looking directly at certain persons while I analyze the faces of others unashamedly.

In my dreams the rooms of different buildings extract themselves, redecorate and form new buildings. Some are haunted and create a sense of unpleasantness behind my back, and I do not want to turn my head to look behind me. Rather, I prefer to think of the dream in which I flew on the back of a unicorn down the stairwell, or swam through the air of the hallway, or the time I walked so fully awake it was surreal along a forest path with a friend.

What is reality? What does it mean to be awake? What is it about having a cat lying across your lap and purring contently that seeps well-being into you, fills you utterly and completely with soft contentment, leaves you relaxed, and at peace? What is it that causes laughter, or the forgetting of laughter? Where do thoughts come from? Why does a galloping dog fill me with joy? For what species are my mirror neurons wired? For what species are your mirror neurons wired? The other day as I watered a geranium, too late--I had let the soil become dry--I discovered the brown skeleton of a dried flower stalk, tiny delicate closed buds dead. Suddenly I felt as though I might cry, recognized without any conscious thought that this was the plant's unwanted abortion. I could not throw away the dried stalk in the bathroom trash, but rather stepped onto the porch and dropped it onto the snowy earth. I cannot explain this. I think there are some things that are known or understood, and it is baffling to me that it is so baffling that we may intuit from unfathomable sources within ourselves useful knowledge, when to gain knowledge from outside exclusively human means (language, mathematics, logic) is by convention understandable.

The other day I looked out a third story window and for the first time saw the trees as so many individual persons near and far, and wondered that I had not always seen them in this way. Perhaps I am more familiar with them now, just as a crowd of strangers blurs into ambiguity of moving objects while a room full of familiar persons is full of distinct personalities. Knowledge changes with experience; experience changes with knowledge; experience changes with experience. I begin to confabulate.

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Welcome to My Overactive Mind

Last night, as I was lying in bed falling asleep, I was listening to my chronic tinnitus (ringing in my ears). I found that the ringing was less noticeable if I turned my mental mp3 player to a song in the key of the ringing. After a while I was unable to distinguish the ringing from the music playing in my head. Sometimes when I listen to music on lower quality speakers and I can’t hear all of the layers of the music my mind fills the missing parts in and the experience is not dampened. Likewise, I sometimes will hear a song that I have loved for years on a different stereo and discover that my favorite little details of the song weren’t really in the song. Makes me wonder how much of world I experience is just my overactive mind filling in the gaps and creating its own features.

According to the Santiago Theory of Cognition, put forward by neuro-scientists Humberto Maturana and Francisco Varela, all living systems are cognitive systems. Life cannot be separated from the process of cognition, the process of knowing. In the Santiago theory, mind is not a thing(like the brain) but a process of knowing and cognizing. In most theories of cognition, it is assumed that there is an objective, material world which the mind identifies and reflects in the consciousness of the observer. In these theories, the mind is a thing, often either the brain itself or some emergent property of the brain. The Santiago theory understands the mind to be the very process of cognition as opposed to the conscious part of the body.

While proponents of the Santiago theory do not deny the existence of a material world, they understand that the world of our everyday experience is not an objective reality. As philosopher and scientist Dan Dennett explains in his Ted Talk there is nothing intrinsically sweet about sugar or honey, “if you looked at glucose molecules until you were blind you would not see why they tasted sweet.” Sugar, according to Dennett, tastes sweet because, biologically, we like it. We do not like it because it tastes sweet. A similar concept holds true for our perception of smell, color, temperature, and beauty. Color does not exist objectively in the material world. Objectively, color is frequency of vibration of the electromagnetic field, the same as heat, microwaves, radio waves, and x-rays. It is only within our physiology that these frequencies of vibration are recognized as having color.

An old Deepak Copra piece titled What is the Nature of Reality? explores some of the limits of sensory perception.

“…our initial sensory experiences and how we interpret them or how they are interpreted for us actually structure the very anatomy and physiology of our nervous system in such a way that ultimately the nervous system serves only one function: to keep reinforcing the initial interpretation. Anything that doesn't reinforce the initial interpretation doesn't even get into the nervous system. So if you don't have a concept or a notion or an idea that something exists, then your nervous system won't even take it in.”

Just as my overactive mind fills in and amends the music that I hear it also manufactures beauty when I look at my girlfriend and taste when I eat. This is one of the most amazing and beautiful capacities of the mind which gives meaning to the human experience. With this understanding it is interesting to ask, how much of what holds us back from creating the world we want to live in, the institutions we want to study and work in, and the communities we want to share our experiences with are the limitations we have been cultured to see? How many of the limitations to human progress are the result of an overactive mind?

Saturday, January 22, 2011

I Divided Myself by Zero . . .

(Actually it was a while ago, 5/22/09, and things have been different ever since. Persons taking Calculus 2 and other math classes should exercise caution when such temptations come to them.)


I divided myself by zero,
So now I'm undefined,
And assuming I was a finite quantity to begin with
Now I'm infinite
(And by the way this isn't a poem, I just like writing in equation-esque if-then-therefores)
So since I'm infinite I'm everything
Which means the only thing I can now divide myself by is myself.
So I'll divide myself by myself--
Infinity by infinity--
But anything divided by itself is one.
(Although infinity divided by infinity is still infinity.)
So now I am infinity, but I may also think of myself as one.
But now I have two ways of conceptualizing myself,
And I myself am separate from either conceptualization,
So that makes three
And really I'm not sure who or what I am
If not everything
Which is what I was to begin with!
Well, ever since I divided by zero--
I'm undefined, and defined also,
Which somehow seems even less defined
Than being simply undefined entirely.
But now I have an identity crisis on my hands--
It is very dangerous to divide oneself by zero.
It's just that it's so pleasant to call oneself infinite,
Though rather disorienting.
I suppose it is good to be both infinite and finite,
For to be finite alone is unsatisfying.
Yes, I think I must be both.
That is why I must be y=tanx--
So that I can swoop off to infinity,
Reappear racing towards the x-axis from negative infinity,
Slow down and leisurely observe the finite realm in which I find myself,
And swoop off to infinity again.
(Oh dear. I am not so sure now.
Is this a poem? Perhaps it's undefined.)

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Discovery v. Creation (as it pertains to me)

This is my first post here, but it is certainly not the beginning in the continuum of an ongoing series of conversations I have with myself and anyone who cares to join me.

Prior questions include: "What is Real?" "How do I know what is real?" "Is there absolute Truth?" "Can anything be known for certain?" "What assumptions (or beliefs) are most useful?" "What are the consequences of my assumptions/beliefs in my own life?" Or, "IF one believes A, THEN how will one interpret the world and behave in it?" "What is my relationship to reality?" "What is my niche?" "Who am I?"

I invite you to play with all of them. Here are my thoughts for today. Please note that they do not conform to standard English grammar. (Most of my writing does, but this came out in a stream of consciousness style. I say came out, because I don't know where thoughts come from. "Where do thoughts come from?" is another question I recommend.)


My old question where I left off in the string of precise questions was the relationship between discovery and creation and my role.

To pursue reality--presumably an independent reality which included little me--was to be a discoverer of things as they are. Science. Stepping back to observe, or carefully interacting. Wishing for nothing in particular except that things be themselves and let me know them as they are. Freedom to appreciate, to find underlying dynamic principles, to understand, to be stable and directionless, open. Intrinsic & relational values of everything.

Then seemingly at odds with this, creation. Meaning-making. Taking direction, creating definitions, pulling the finite out of the infinite, seeing shapes within the void. Goal-setting--self-alteration, deciding to be more this or more that or less that. Wanting external things to be different; conflicting directions, creative forces at odds. Responsibility and power. Art. Freedom to create, to plunge into a specific form of bondage, to synthesize the old into the new. Interactive reality. Neurolinguistic programming, opinions, choice. Co-creative reality soup. Relativity; perspectives vying for power. Aggression. Attachment. Wants. External constraints, internal constraints. Doubt. Failure. Immersion, and stepping back. Discovery inevitably part of creation: "Curving back on my own nature, I create again and again."

(Thus ends Art and Nature, minus doubt and failure. On to Classical Mechanics.)

Squirrels' flowing bounds: parabolas or sinusoidal functions? Does science know what it's talking about? Are Newtonian diagrams socially responsible entities? Tools, neutrality-->frustration. I can approximate the path of a football with this equation, but I do not know how to kick a football.

(Back to Art and Nature conclusions)

I am the outcome of every process I engage in. I am my own artwork haphazardly pieced together by this discussion and that experience and those stories. Each discovery I make re-creates me into something new. I am a process. I influence other processes, I initiate other processes. (Fast-forward to present) When did I last extract myself to slip into Being and discovering, when did I last close my eyes to concerns that they might be refreshed and see the world anew? Stop thinking? Can one be responsible and do these things? Yes . . . but the current social perception seems to be 'no.'

"Seems to be"--the ever ambiguous world, the ever unsure reality where to be certain is to be wrong and to succeed requires assumptions empirically grounded.

(Back to Physics--Classical Mechanics; Solids, Fluids, and Thermodynamics)

"Why" retired to a grave; the world dimmed; and "How" became ghostly pale as the "Why" was replaced by mundane descriptions of increasingly smaller-scale "What"s with no apparent reason or purpose. Humans became predictable variables who made perfect sense to themselves; others' agreement indicated capacity to understand, rather than degree of sensibility.

The unknown became associated with failure. Failure became associated with unhappiness. The world spun west to east and day became night.

I do not know what I am writing anymore, so now I will stop.

Upon reading through I have discovered it, I shall proceed.

There is direction in life: accumulation of energy. (Presumably universal) laws of thermodynamics interact with human desires, with biological, chemical, and geological processes. We all are processes, aren't we?

Perhaps the only question is whether we are accumulating energy via an external energy source or some infinite internal dynamism of a metaphysical nature. If so, then we are alive, physically or metaphorically, respectively.

What does it mean to live metaphorically? Associatively, connecting A to B in a web of meaning. Associating intrinsic values of distinct entities . . . How can one identify intrinsic values from an external vantage point? How can one declare entities distinct aside from perception which is by its nature interpretive?

Bahumbug }:( "Chop wood, carry water." Life as an experiment, or series of experiments, or series of simultaneous experiments on experimenting. That which knows cannot prove itself hypothetically. Empirical evidence gathering requires tweaking the experiment.

How can one be a discoverer and a creator, a scientist and an artist (is there any difference between a scientist and an artist? I think not,) how can one be still and at once active, receptive and dynamic (another surprise--dynamism spills out of receptivity. How can one be receptive?) how can one be free yet play within boundaries?

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Welcome

Paradigms Lost exists as a collection of authors who contribute thoughts, feelings, ideas, and research as well as comments and feedback to each other as we individually and collectively explore our paradigms. Paradigms lost is a bit of a playful idea that suggests we may have lost or are looking for our paradigm(s).

A paradigm could be defined as: a philosophical or theoretical framework or a pattern of thought that serves as the container in which our assumptions, beliefs, theories, etc. about how the world works exist in.

It might also be claimed that what we are attempting is an intentional paradigm shift, or, since it could be argued that this a continuous (and also sometimes sudden) process that we are documenting the process of our paradigm(s) shifting.

Paradigm paralysis 
Perhaps the greatest barrier to a paradigm shift, in some cases, is the reality of paradigm paralysis: the inability or refusal to see beyond the current models of thinking [9]. This is similar to what psychologists term Confirmation bias. (from wikipedia)