Warm Data is the relational information that describes the many parts of a system. For example, to understand a family, one must understand not only the family members but also the relationships between them, the context they reside in, the ecosystem that shapes them and that is, in turn, shaped by them –that is, the warm data.
Warm Data is the relational and transcontextual information about and within the interrelationships that integrate elements of a complex system. For example, to understand a family, one must understand not only the family members but also the relationships between them, the context they reside in, the ecosystem that shapes them and that is, in turn, shaped by them –that is, the warm data.
Complex, systemic challenges are shaped by the interaction of multiple contexts—the economy, nature, politics, culture, technology, etc. —and to effectively address such challenges, we have to understand the transcontextual interdependence. With this awareness, we can shape responses to meet the complexity around us effectively. Without it, we often enact simple responses to complex challenges which in turn create their own problems.
Warm Data familiarizes groups of people with the ways in which the contexts of their lives marinate and overlap into each other, and it offers an introduction to the complexity of their own lives so that they may better see the complexity of others. Through this discovery, people begin to see how vital it is to tend to their families, communities, and the land, and they are able to respond to emergencies with warmth.
Hope lies in the very fact that, as living beings, we are made for relationship. It is only possible to express our humanity in relationship to other human beings. We exude warm data in our eyes, our smiles, our verbal and non-verbal conversations, and the importance we attune to relationships with others at the personal, family, and community levels and in local, national, and global contexts. We also can reach into ancient wisdom to add to our store of warm data and the capabilities unleashed when ‘I see you in me and me in you’. Our well-being and that of our planet is possible only if we permit ourselves to perceive and embrace the rich expressions of who we are as living human communities and to find a way in relationship. This will require warmth and rigorous attention to relational integrity above the anxiety to control.
Is it possible to respond to the living world without information that is also alive!
In order to interface with any complex system without disrupting the circuitry of the interdependencies that give it its integrity, we must look at the spread of relationships that make the system robust. Using only analysis of statistical data will offer conclusions that can point to actions that are out of sync with the complexity of the situation. But information without context and interrelationality is likely to lead us toward actions that are misinformed, thereby creating further destructive patterns.
Everything. Business, medical, economics, development, ecological understanding, cross cultural diplomacy, and more. The International Bateson Institute will make this data available to political, cultural, economic, educational, and arts sectors.
Wherever there are complex systems and ‘wicked problems’, there is also Warm Data.
Grounded in over a century of deep theoretical roots and a lineage of systems thinking, the Warm Data practices transform complexity science into an experiential approach of profound mutual learning and relationship building.
There are two warm data practices made for today’s fragmented and broken world—Warm Data Labs and People Need People (PNP) Online.
The Warm Data Lab is created to help release and revitalize sensitivity to the sacred processes of life that have been fragmented by the last several hundred years of history.
People Need People Online adapts this practice to offer uniquely rich and storied online communication, in contrast to the common experience of polarized and divisive digital communication patterns.
By shifting perspectives through a transcontextual conversational structure, the Warm Data practices:
addresses the fractures that have entered into the way contexts of day-to-day life are presented as separate.
allows people with no previous exposure to complex systems theory to perceive the systemic relational patterns, interactions, and interdependencies in their communities, generating a nuanced systemic understanding of their circumstances.
strengthens the collective ability within families and communities to perceive, discuss, and articulate the complexity of the issues they face.
inspires unimagined possibilities opening new ways of seeing, living and communing.
There is no goal in a PNP session or a Warm Data Lab as they are not about solving identified problems. Instead, they allow movement through many aspects of memory and perception that can alter the underlying assumptions about who I am, who you are, and what life is about.
These sessions have been designed to deepen the collective perception of complexity through personal stories, and professional expertise. Together these groups of people are building relationships that build relationships that build relationships— a vital ingredient of how systems change happens.
Whatever your occupation, whatever you do in life, whoever you are, seeing complexity and trans-contextuality, looking for ‘symmathesy’ and warm data, embracing ambiguity and paradox (such as double binds), will stand you and those you touch in good stead to tackle the ‘wicked problems’ we now face as a society. Because of our conditioning, we are too often unwittingly part of the problem, despite our best intentions.
Diving deeply into the practices of being a Warm Data host, we are more likely to tend to the possibilities of ‘readying’ for change to meet the brokenness of the existing structures and systems. It’s not just how we are able to ‘act’ it’s looking at what and how it is possible to ‘act’.
Being a Warm Data Host offers the possibilities to see, feel, think and know differently.
This training is challenging. It is a rich blend of theory and practice, both of which are essential to a deep grounding and upskilling to run the warm data practices. (People Need People sessions and Warm Data Labs).
As a certified host you’ll come away with the tools and knowledge to set up and facilitate groups going through the practices. This includes the structure, timing, and form of the sessions, troubleshooting, guidelines of what not to etc.
We will also guide you through the theoretical underpinnings of the Warm Data Lab & PNP practices. The theories that will be discussed and explored include:
Patterns that connect
Bertrand Russel’s Logical Levels
Difference that makes a difference
Multiple description
Mutual learning and calibration (Symmathesy)
Iterative multi-modal learning
Aphanipoiesis
Mind (G. Bateson)
Systems and complexity theory
Ecology of communication
Double bind
Conscious purpose
Epistemological frames
Abductive process
Change in complex systems
Interdependency
Requisite variety
Schismogenisis
Transcontextual processes
Integrity,
Improvisation/sense-making.
Jointly Organised by:
The course fee is SGD $2200.
Upcoming Runs will be announced when available
Note: A limited number of partial Scholarships (€750) will be made available at the discretion of the organizing team. If you intend to apply for a scholarship, please provide information to support your scholarship in your application by sending it to fajariah.S@hayaanetwork.com. An interview session will be fix to determine if you qualify for the scholarship.