The Fifth Discipline

The Fifth Discipline: The Art & Practice of The Learning Organization

URL (Amazon): 
http://www.amazon.com/Fifth-Discipline-Practice-Learning-Organization/dp/0385517254/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1228314798&sr=8-1
State: 
Read
Author: 
Peter M. Senge
ISBN: 
978-0385517256
Amazon Editorial Review: 
This revised edition of Peter Senge’s bestselling classic, The Fifth Discipline, is based on fifteen years of experience in putting the book’s ideas into practice. As Senge makes clear, in the long run the only sustainable competitive advantage is your organization’s ability to learn faster than the competition. The leadership stories in the book demonstrate the many ways that the core ideas in The Fifth Discipline, many of which seemed radical when first published in 1990, have become deeply integrated into people’s ways of seeing the world and their managerial practices. In The Fifth Discipline, Senge describes how companies can rid themselves of the learning “disabilities” that threaten their productivity and success by adopting the strategies of learning organizations—ones in which new and expansive patterns of thinking are nurtured, collective aspiration is set free, and people are continually learning how to create results they truly desire. The updated and revised Currency edition of this business classic contains over one hundred pages of new material based on interviews with dozens of practitioners at companies like BP, Unilever, Intel, Ford, HP, Saudi Aramco, and organizations like Roca, Oxfam, and The World Bank. It features a new Foreword about the success Peter Senge has achieved with learning organizations since the book’s inception, as well as new chapters on Impetus (getting started), Strategies, Leaders’ New Work, Systems Citizens, and Frontiers for the Future. Mastering the disciplines Senge outlines in the book will: • Reignite the spark of genuine learning driven by people focused on what truly matters to them • Bridge teamwork into macro-creativity • Free you of confining assumptions and mindsets • Teach you to see the forest and the trees • End the struggle between work and personal time
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Personal Mastery

Sports psychology and martial arts have taught me more about myself than most books I've read. The greatest beauty of the above are how transferable they are across context, the flow of boxing is essentually a form of meditation, or in neuro-semantic terms "Genius State". The single largest component I've noticed has now been brought to light in Peter Senge's "The 5th Discipline"...Personal Mastery.

Although I've subscribed to the term self-efficacy in the past, there is something almost romantic about personal mastery. A discipline of a life focused on learning and growth, with the acceptance that we will never meet our full potential, because as we grow so does our potential. The term mastery itself conjures up images of aged monks practicing the arts of meditation in my mind.

Practitioners, according to Senge display some of the following attribute:

* They have defined and concretised vision
* The see their current reality as an ally to reach that vision
* They are committed to seeing reality accurately and truthfully
* They are extremely curios and inquisitive
* The work with the forces of change, as opposed to resisting them
* They feel the connection with others and life itself

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