>I became a systematic examination of all of my values. I began listing
>them, in no particular order, until I felt that I had comprehensively
>covered all of them. To my surprise my behavior was worse than I
>originally thought!
>
>The next thing I did was begin to organize my values, using an
>object-oriented approach (for those who are not familiar with
>object-oriented programming, it is a form of taxonomy which allows objects
>to be grouped according to their relationship to one another).
Very very interesting!
this object-oriented approach has been mentioned before: could you explain
some more, how to do it, applicability etcetera?
[I hope you're not going to say it's your own application of OOP because I
'm not a programmer [although I understand the basics of BASIC and
HyperTalk [SmallTalk derivative], but if it is I'm sure lot's of us would
like to hear it... thanks]
Best wishes
Arthur Battram
--from Arthur Battram, organiser of 'Tools for Learning', assisting local authorities to apply complexity concepts to learning apb@cityplex.demon.co.uk "simplicity is out there..."
Learning-org -- An Internet Dialog on Learning Organizations For info: <rkarash@karash.com> -or- <http://world.std.com/~lo/>