June 17, 2026
The more we study the major problems of our time, the more we come to realize that they cannot be understood in isolation. They are systemic problems, which means that they are interconnected and interdependent.
Capra wrote this in 1996, at a moment when scientists, economists, and policymakers were still largely trying to solve problems by breaking them into smaller and smaller parts. He had spent decades watching that approach fail — in ecology, in medicine, in social policy. The insight here points directly at trust and surrender: if everything is connected, then your attempt to control one piece of the system in isolation is not just ineffective, it is working against the actual nature of reality. Surrender, in Capra's framework, is not weakness — it is the accurate response to how things actually work.
Reflection
Think about a specific problem you are trying to solve right now. What would change if you stopped managing it alone and let the larger system around you respond?
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