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- <text id=91TT0105>
- <title>
- Jan. 14, 1991: Old Paradigm, New Paradigm
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Jan. 14, 1991 Breast Cancer
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 65
- Old Paradigm, New Paradigm
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Lance Morrow
- </p>
- <p> Paradigm has become a buzz word for theorists of the
- emerging world. The term, from the Greek paradeigma, means an
- example, a model, a pattern. People in business schools, in
- think tanks, in the White House, use paradigm as a sort of
- reality thresher--a way of comparing past and present, an
- implement for sorting out history at a moment of tumbling
- global change. Paradigm is a buzz word that does not sing, of
- course, but never mind. Buzz words, being often tricky,
- insincere or brainless, are part of the Old Paradigm anyway.
- </p>
- <p> The term paradigm, however, is useful, like a Swiss Army
- Knife. The world, with a surreal, decisive crispness, has been
- sorting itself into categories of Old Paradigm and New
- Paradigm. The 1990s have become a transforming boundary between
- one age and another, between a scheme of things that has
- disintegrated and another that is taking shape. A millennium
- is coming, a cosmic divide. The 20th century is an almost
- extinct volcano; the 21st is an embryo.
- </p>
- <p> New Paradigm-Old Paradigm makes a game of lists: what's in,
- what's out. More important, it is a way of considering what
- works (New Paradigm) and what doesn't work anymore (Old
- Paradigm).
- </p>
- <p> The cold war was the paradigm of the old world order. The
- New Paradigm is what we are seeking. Communism and socialism
- are Old Paradigm. Big ideology is dead, and global
- environmentalism will come more and more alive. "In effect,"
- says Lester R. Brown, president of Worldwatch Institute, "the
- battle to save the planet will replace the battle over ideology
- as the organizing theme of the new world order. The goal of the
- cold war was to get others to change their values and behavior.
- Winning the battle to save the planet depends on changing our
- own values and behavior."
- </p>
- <p> Ted Kennedy and Strom Thurmond, let us say, are Old
- Paradigm, being yin and yang of old wars (New Deal liberalism
- vs. Dixiecrat conservatism) that seem somewhat beside the point
- now. American government is not dead, but it cannot proceed as
- before, on the old model. The long crisis of the Democratic
- Party has been its struggle to emerge from its once powerful
- and successful old paradigm and find a new one.
- </p>
- <p> Other Old Paradigms: Fidel Castro, apartheid, the American
- Century, cigarette smoking, labor unions and strikes, alcohol,
- CBS News, charisma, knowledge (as opposed to information),
- blood-feud revenge, corporate loyalty and paternalism, Northern
- Ireland, Mario Cuomo (the politician as a Frank Capra movie)
- and letter writing.
- </p>
- <p> New Paradigm: Vaclav Havel, Cable News Network, information,
- fax machines, computers, Sam Nunn, the new Germany, pluralism,
- democracy, F.W. de Klerk, unsentimental ruthlessness, William
- Safire, the Pacific Rim.
- </p>
- <p> Old Paradigm is not necessarily bad. New Paradigm is not
- necessarily good.
- </p>
- <p> Old Paradigm and New Paradigm are often blended. Ham-handed,
- mired stupidity, sheer dumbness, are Old Paradigm. Stupidity
- is New Paradigm as well, but in a different style (shallow,
- amoral, empty, ignorant of the past). Television, the medium
- of the New Paradigm, has a devastating addiction to the
- mediocre that it now and then overcomes. The New Paradigm in
- haste and distraction sometimes goes for the simple-minded.
- Entertainment and news media, for example, find themselves
- "dumbing down" their content on the strange assumption that
- their audience, or reality itself, has grown stupider. It is
- not true, but the idea is pernicious and self-fulfilling: the
- stupider the public's sources of information, the stupider the
- public must eventually become.
- </p>
- <p> In George Bush's mind, Old Paradigm and New Paradigm circle
- each other warily, like father and son fighting it out in a
- sort of Oedipal struggle. Bush is often New Paradigm in
- international affairs and Old Paradigm on freighted moral
- issues like abortion and patriotism, which send him scurrying
- back toward patriarchal absolutes.
- </p>
- <p> Mikhail Gorbachev? An object lesson in how fragile new
- paradigms can be, how quickly they can be menaced by newer
- ones. Clinging to the Old Paradigm once its time is gone is
- fatal.
- </p>
- <p> Saddam Hussein and the Persian Gulf? A last spasm, perhaps,
- of the Old Paradigm--a conflict over natural resources in the
- way that so many of the wars of the O.P. were fought over land.
- In the New Paradigm, big land means less than microchips, which
- contain the new riches. The implications of landscape are
- environmental and recreational. Power has gone miniature--out
- of muscle and expanse, into mind. The Soviet Union has endless
- territory. Japan has little, Hong Kong virtually none.
- </p>
- <p> Yitzhak Shamir and Yasser Arafat are Old Paradigm. The
- trouble is that there is no New Paradigm for them to migrate
- to. Not yet, or maybe not ever. Most of the conflicts in the
- world occur because the parties cannot shed themselves of the
- Old Paradigm and find the new one. It is difficult to run a
- closed universe on an open and shrinking planet.
- </p>
- <p> In America Ronald Reagan somehow made way for the New
- Paradigm by allowing the nation to feel for a time innocent
- again. All of that seems far away now. Reagan took America so
- far back into its Old Paradigm (a dream of America, a nostalgia
- for Dixon, Ill.) that it emerged refreshed, if only for a
- little while. America is Old Paradigm. But the genius of the
- country, beyond its natural wealth and its Constitution, has
- been its capacity for self-transformation, for renewal, for
- improvisation--the gift of old paradigms for begetting new
- paradigms.
- </p>
- <p> Early in his Administration, George Bush tried to sum up the
- spirit abroad in the world as the "New Breeze." The phrase
- evoked not history on the march but a summery mid afternoon in
- Kennebunkport, Me. A young White House aide, James Pinkerton,
- has proposed the "New Paradigm" as the overarching idea, the
- signature, of the Bush years. We shall see. The President has
- used the phrase New Paradigm a few times in a glancing way, but
- the phrase may not be his style. Budget Director Richard Darman
- mocked Pinkerton's New Paradigm in a speech a few weeks ago
- ("Brother, can you paradigm?").
- </p>
- <p> Pinkerton, who is only 32, a onetime libertarian, explains
- paradigms in terms of the Ptolemaic and Copernican models of
- the universe. The mind, in order to explore and solve problems,
- must operate upon certain models, certain sets of assumptions.
- For 13 centuries, humankind assumed, as Ptolemy taught, that
- the sun revolved around the earth. It was a workable paradigm
- of the universe, in its way, but became the Old Paradigm when
- Copernicus propounded the New Paradigm that the earth revolved
- around the sun.
- </p>
- <p> In Pinkerton's universe, centralized bureaucracy and Big
- Government are the Old Paradigm. The idea, of course, has been
- evolving since the abdication of Lyndon Johnson and the dawning
- realization that the American government does not have endless
- money to spend. In Pinkerton's New Paradigm, government would
- be subject to market forces as never before and people would
- be empowered to make their own individual choices (using school
- vouchers, for example), while government would be decentralized
- and decision making pushed down as close as possible to the
- level of the people affected. Programs would be judged by
- output rather than input--by results rather than
- appropriations. The test of the New Paradigm is What Works. It
- universalizes John Kennedy's definition of politics as the art
- of the possible.
- </p>
- <p> Or is this New Paradigm, as some say, only a bright
- intellectual flourish meant to cover the retreat of the Federal
- Government from almost everything? "No," says Pinkerton, "it
- is an intellectual construct to make things work. It is a way
- of thinking about change and making it rational. I have never
- said we should cut spending. The conventional wisdom around
- Washington is that nothing works. Americans don't believe it."
- </p>
- <p> The New Paradigm is above all struggling toward a working
- model for the information age. The great totalitarianisms of
- the 20th century (Stalin's, Hitler's) depended upon the
- dictator's power to isolate the people and control their minds
- by controlling all information. The great work of inspiring the
- democracies also required heroic manipulations of image and
- information--by F.D.R., by Churchill, for example. Such
- leaders gave an eloquence and resonance to the Old Paradigm--a powerful accumulation of moral experience. It is possible to
- feel wistful sometimes for those profound frames of reference
- while wandering around in the New Paradigm, which is almost
- by definition callow. You must not let daylight in upon magic.
- Now that information is transnational, daylight pours in.
- Certain shadowy and thunderous effects upon which charisma and
- old leadership depended have now become impossible. The New
- Paradigm is not haunted by the furies and ghosts of its
- parents. It looks upon the world with a disconcerting alien's
- eye. It is not a sentimentalist.
- </p>
- <p> A fragment of poetry by the Greek Archilochus recorded these
- enigmatic lines: "The fox knows many things, the hedgehog knows
- one big thing." In a famous essay, Isaiah Berlin described
- Tolstoy as a fox who knew many things and Dostoyevsky as a
- hedgehog who knew one big thing. The Old Paradigm knew one big
- thing (centralized government, one organizing ideology, one big
- idea). The New Paradigm is a fox that accommodates many things--it is decentralized, undoctrinaire, pragmatic, multifaceted.
- </p>
- <p> When Theodore Roosevelt became President around the turn of
- the 20th century, he called in architect Charles McKim to
- remodel the White House. What McKim did, in effect, was to tear
- the 19th century out of the mansion, knock down the heavy
- Victorian screens and airless brocaded atmospherics, and let
- in light--a clean weightless look that at the time seemed
- stunning. History is filled with regenerations, with new
- beginnings, new models. Vatican II did such work upon centuries
- of the Roman Catholic Church, Ataturk upon the dying remnants
- of Ottoman Turkey.
- </p>
- <p> Regeneration is always cleansing and usually dangerous. The
- First Law of Wing Walking cautions, "Never let go of what
- you've got until you've got hold of something else." But
- sometimes getting to the New Paradigm involves spending a
- certain amount of terrifying time in midair. And so we are
- pinwheeling now in black space, trying to figure out whether
- apocalypse is very Old Paradigm or very New Paradigm.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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