November 2020

Why should we use Systems Thinking to identify the root causes of problems and new opportunities

Do you know that the first tree in the history of Earth’s utopia made its debut just 300 million years ago? That’s not even the third quarter of the Earth’s age. As you walk through the woods, you may get an impression that the surrounding trees are all very individual, passive entities. However, over million years, the species of trees have evolved, from a leafless, stunted, fern-like tree that first came into being to over 60,000 species of trees on Earth extensively spread out as a linked and interconnected network. Understanding the System as a Whole In the beautifully penned down

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Innovation’s Time is Now – Circular Economy Is Paving the Way

Visiting my mother 3 years ago handed me some lessons on circular design principles. Long story short, I saw her using a 30-year-old fridge, to which I inquired why not to buy a new one in so long. She explained that fridges these days are expensive and not good quality to last as long as her old fridge. If she were to purchase a new one, she’d eventually have to buy another in 5–7 years. I realized that she was right. Today, not many things are designed to sustain over a more extended time, unlike my mother’s old fridge. Planned

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What Is Circular Economy and Why Should You Adopt It?

The “Indigenous Perceptions Of The Human–Nature Relationship” paper describes how indigenous inhabitants believe in having a shared ancestry and origin with nature. For them, life anywhere is only possible when the inhabitants consider the natural constituents of an ecosystem surrounding them as their kin or relatives. In such an environment, the two life forms affect each other, which in turn enhances the ecosystem. The Maori culture of New Zealand is a contemporary example where humans and nature are profoundly related and are considered equally interdependent. Their way of life is abreast of the modern sustainable life and conservation of natural

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