Page 13 - stephen covey The seven habits of highly effective people
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THE SEVEN HABITS OF HIGHLY EFFECTIVE PEOPLE                                                      Brought to you by FlyHeart

       now both looking at the same identical facts -- black lines and white spaces -- and they would both
       acknowledge these as facts.    But each person's interpretation of these facts represents prior experiences,
       and the facts have no meaning whatsoever apart from the interpretation.
             The more aware we are of our basic paradigms, maps, or assumptions, and the extent to which we
       have been influenced by our experience, the more we can take responsibility for those paradigms,
       examine them, test them against reality, listen to  others and be open to their perceptions, thereby
       getting a larger picture and a far more objective view.

       The Power of a Paradigm Shift

             Perhaps the most important insight to be gained from the perception demonstration is in the area of
       paradigm shifting, what we might call the "Aha!" experience when someone finally "sees" the composite
       picture in another way.    The more bound a person is by the initial perception, the more powerful the
       "Aha!" experience is.    It's as though a light were suddenly turned on inside.
             The term Paradigm Shift was introduced by Thomas Kuhn in his highly influential landmark book,
       The Structure of Scientific Revolutions.    Kuhn shows how almost every significant breakthrough in the
       field of scientific endeavor is first a break with tradition, with old ways of thinking, with old paradigms.
             For Ptolemy, the great Egyptian astronomer,  the earth was the center of the universe.  But
       Copernicus created a Paradigm Shift, and a great deal of resistance and persecution as well, by placing
       the sun at the center.    Suddenly, everything took on a different interpretation.
             The Newtonian model of physics was a clockwork paradigm and is still the basis of modern
       engineering.  But it was partial, incomplete.   The scientific world was revolutionized by the
       Einsteinian paradigm, the relativity paradigm, which had much higher predictive and explanatory
       value.
          Until the germ theory was developed, a high percentage of  women and children died during
       childbirth, and one could understand why.    In military skirmishes, more men were dying from small
       wounds and diseases than from the major traumas on the front lines.    But as soon as the germ theory
       was developed, a whole new paradigm, a better, improved way of understanding what was happening
       made dramatic, significant medical improvement possible.
             The United States today is the fruit of a Paradigm Shift.    The traditional concept of government for
       centuries had been a monarchy, the divine right of kings.    Then a different paradigm was developed --
       government of the people, by the people, and for  the people.    And a constitutional democracy was
       born, unleashing tremendous human energy and ingenuity, and creating a standard of living, of
       freedom and liberty, of influence and hope unequaled in the history of the world.
             Not all Paradigm Shifts are in positive directions.  As we have observed, the shift from the
       character ethic to the personality ethic has drawn us away from the very roots that nourish true success
       and happiness.
             But whether they shift us in positive or negative directions, whether they are instantaneous or
       developmental, Paradigm Shifts move us from one way of seeing the world to another.    And those
       shifts create powerful change.    Our paradigms, correct or incorrect, are the sources of our attitudes and
       behaviors, and ultimately our relationships with others.
             I remember a mini-Paradigm Shift I experienced one Sunday morning on a subway in New York.
       People were sitting quietly -- some reading newspapers, some lost in thought, some resting with their
       eyes closed.    It was a calm, peaceful scene.
             Then suddenly, a man and his children entered the subway car.    The children were so loud and
       rambunctious that instantly the whole climate changed.
             The man sat down next to me and closed his  eyes, apparently oblivious to the situation.    The
       children were yelling back and forth, throwing things, even grabbing people's papers.    It was very
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