Stage-1: Causal Explanation
What is Going On?
Faced with a situation inviting or potentially demanding change, the initial response is to seek clarification. We want an explanation of what is going on!
«Explanation» is associated with inquiry, knowing and theory formation elsewhere in THEE. More
- Explanation appears in the explanatory research method (PH'2L3) that proposes and tests hypothetical causes. The hypothesis is an explanation.
- Explanation also appears as a level of knowing in the framework for Knowing What to Do (PH'2Q1) where it is a theoretical explanation (L6).
But we do not want an inquiry. Even if there is no realistic possibility of systematic inquiry in emergent social situations, there is still this intrusive instinctive demand to "know" (or is it "understand"?) what is going on.
Somehow we imagine that knowing will tell us whether anything needs to be done and even what might be done. So, no matter how complex and unknowable a social situation is, we commonly come up with causes, often just one, but rarely more than two or three.
For example, on Monday the stock-market falls 1% and the papers say this was due to fears of recession; on Tuesday it recovers 1% and the papers say this was due to reassuring comments from the Central Bank; on Wednesday it goes nowhere and the papers say that everyone is waiting for the results of a forthcoming election in a distant country.
More:
• A friend does not get a job and you say that the employment market is tough because of recent legislation.
• A hostile country imposes tariffs on a particular export item, and the Minister of Trade explains on TV that this is in retaliation for a criticism made in the UN.
• Your company decides to sell off a subsidiary against the wishes of its employees, and your boss explains that this is required due to competitive pressures.
• Your husband seems sad and you want to help. When you enquire about the situation, he says that it has been an exhausting day and lapses into silence.
A moment's reflection will surely tell you that such explanations are bordering on the ridiculous. They avoid many relevant factors and may be contradictory from day to day. But such accounts are provided regularly nonetheless. And they are often accepted at face value. Indeed it would often be regarded as rude, even unacceptable, to challenge them or criticize the speaker.
Nor are people willing to tolerate a response advising that causes of social events are typically not known and not knowable.
Is There an Alternative Starting Place? Review of the other depiction paradigms indicates that they are not focused on causation or explanation and are too complicated for immediate spontaneous use. In addition, the Causal Mode allows for progressively increasing sophistication down the ellipse, and that improvement is the goal of improving clarity.
Values & Assumptions
Promoting Acceptability
Essence: Satisfying Explanation
Faced with a situation that might need us to make changes, we immediately and instinctively call for an explanatory account. While superficially, the explanation is supposed to reflect some reality, that is rarely the primary goal because almost any plausible explanation seems to be acceptable, but it must be satisfying in some way. Perhaps it reaffirms prejudices or preconceptions, perhaps it shows that nothing can or should be done.
Desired Benefit: Reduced Confusion
Any messy situation which calls for engagement generates stress and anxiety because of the confusion that is engendered and because of the potential need for change—which is instinctively disliked. A minimum requirement for any explanation to be experienced as satisfying is that it reduces confusion. The sense of confusion falls most dramatically when the pressure for change is removed or the change expected is unequivocal.
Means: Consensus on Salience
There will be many elements in the situation that could be highlighted and numerous potential perspectives that could be applied. However, certain features will be generally deemed salient. By salience, I mean directly relevant, unequivocally evident, and widely felt as important. So this is where a consensus can be easily found.
Identification of salient features creates the impression that the speaker is on top of the situation and that you are part of a group that likely supports the explanation.
Handling the Group
Participation: Align with Beliefs
Groups are created through members sharing a reality. In order to be part of the group and have the explanation accepted, it is essential that the explanation incorporates or rests on beliefs that are widely shared. These beliefs will have contributed to salience.
Communication: Emphasize the Obvious
The less thinking that is demanded, the easier it becomes to assimilate the explanation and share it with others. Emphasizing what seems obvious builds on salience to guide your own thinking and communicating with your group. That is why provision of clarification can be a semi-automatic reaction.
Individualization: Show Thought Leadership
Explanations are most readily accepted when the person involved is an expert, even a self-declared expert with a unique or pioneering perspective. Such people become recognized as opinion-formers because others find it easier to agree and follow rather than work things out for themselves. Repeated opinion-pieces in the media showing some degree of originality are needed to win recognition as a thought-leader.
Academic scholars and intellectuals develop views of situations slowly and in a complex fashion. Except for those who are publicity-seeking, they avoid making rapid assessments of events, especially if they may demand an urgent response. No-one wants to hear: "this is a complex and difficult situation and I will come back to you with a view in a few months". By that time, the situation will have evolved and concerns will have shifted.
Channeling Your Functioning:
Gain Support: Preoccupation
Clarity is developed by taking a special interest in types of situation and becoming preoccupied with their nature, especially the usual factors that lead to change. If others are aware of this interest, through your job or track record, then your explanations are likely to be given attention.
THEE as an Example in Stage-1
Taxonomic frameworks commonly offer an explanation of particular dimensions of situations. We will follow one example taken from consultancy work through each Stage of the Spiral.
A governing board for health district services asked for help with their policy-making process. But why? On checking the situation it was evident that board members had widely varying views of what a policy was. Some said there was no policy-setting and others said there were too many policies.
A simple and satisfying explanation for the request for help was a lack of consensus on the nature of policy. Get consensus and the process would be straightforward. This finding was communicated.
Like many Stage-1 explanations, that might have sufficed, but in this case it did not.
Limitations
The clarity provided by explanations provided at Stage-1 is extremely limited, even if (by definition) many or most people find it acceptable or even attractive.
The fact that you and others are «satisfied» does not carry much weight in regard to what is said. It can often be easy to show that the explanation is a rationalization: an imposition of reason on a messy situation for defensive purposes.
Such explanations appear simple and persuasive, when they are better described as simplistic and naive. Often the explanation is barely plausible or blatantly implausible. A politician explaining the latest government fiasco can and will say almost anything and, if it is a well-crafted Stage-1 explanation, the come-back remains muted.
Settling at this Stage
The qualifier of «satisfying» indicates that it is quite possible for the handling of a situation to remain at this point.
If the situation is transient or lacks significance for you, then you do not seek further clarification.
If the situation is enduring and significant, some may choose to use this simple explanation as the basis for designing a change or for deciding that no change is required.
Transition
If there is dissatisfaction with the explanation insofar as it seems confused, irrational, mistaken or otherwise a poor guide to determining whether or not the situation calls for change, then more clarification is required.
Provision of further causes and additional details is not sufficient or desirable because this just adds to the complexity and confusion. Rather, the situation needs to be simplified and presented in a way that covers everything relevant and reveals its distinctive nature.
This is possible by demanding an overview of the situation that offers clarity about its components and boundary. The mode that naturally provides this is the Structural.
Ruling Out Alternative Moves
Adopting values based on dualistic depiction (L'4) fails because there is no framework within which opposition can develop. Nor is movement to a mode based on dynamic depiction (L'1) possible because interacting components have not been identified. Finally, modes based on outer circle methods (Atomistic-L'2, Unitary-L7, Unified-L'5) seem to require a more substantial and properly developed explanation.
Originally posted: 30-Oct-2024.