The Moscow Methodological Circle (MMC) was a scientific organisation set up by Georgy Shchedrovitsky to examine problems from an inter-disciplinary point of view, looking at the various methodological approaches of each discipline to yield what they described as "systemic thinking activity".
The MMC started out as an informal group meeting in a pub on Gorky Street which included the mathematician Alexander Zinoviev, the sociologist Boris Grushin and the philosopher Merab Mamardashvili. They attracted the attention of the KGB but were tolerated.
The MMC developed an approach to methodological thinking, which featured these principles:
- holism and reflexivity
- practical orientation which uses systems thinking as the means for organising processes of resolving wicked problems by multi-professional and transdisciplinary teams
- reflexivity as practical recursive orientation of thinking to itself whereby it is able to re-construct and re-direct itself;
- the “methodological turn” from thinking about systems as objects to develop the process of thinking systemically
Legacy
The MMC has had a lasting impact on Russian systems thinking particularly through the Methodological School of Management. This is acknowledged by Viktor Khristenko.
References
- Liborakina, Marina (1996). "A bridge between past and future". Simulation and Gaming Yearbook. 4. Psychology Press: 41–48. ISBN 9780749418663. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
- Rindzeviciute, Egle (2015). "The Future as an Intellectual Technology in the Soviet Union: From Centralised Planning to Reflexive Management". Cahiers du monde Russe. 56 (1): 111–134. doi:10.4000/monderusse.8169.
- Maracha, Viacheslav (2014). "System-Thinking-Activity Approach: Thinking Response to Global Challenges". Book of Abstracts EMCSR 2014.
External links
- Pertsev, Andrey (21 June 2022). "'A chance for revenge': The rise and fall of 'methodology,' the school of thought that produced the idea of the 'Russian world'". Meduza.