Dictionary Definition
mentality
Noun
1 a habitual or characteristic mental attitude
that determines how you will interpret and respond to situations
[syn: outlook, mindset, mind-set]
2 mental ability; "he's got plenty of brains but
no common sense" [syn: brain, brainpower, learning
ability, mental
capacity, wit]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Noun
Derived terms
Translations
- Finnish: mentaliteetti, mielenlaatu
Extensive Definition
A mindset, in decision
theory and general
systems theory, refers to a set of assumptions, methods or
notations held by one or more people or groups of people which is
so established that it creates a powerful incentive within these
people or groups to continue to adopt or accept prior behaviours,
choices, or tools. This phenomenon of cognitive
bias is also sometimes described as mental inertia, "groupthink", or a "paradigm", and it is often
difficult to counteract its effects upon analysis and decision
making processes.
A well-known example is the "Cold War
mindset" prevalent in both the U.S. and
USSR, which
included absolute trust in two-player game theory,
in the integrity of command
chain, in control of nuclear materials, and in the mutual
assured destruction of both in the case of war. Although some
consider that this mindset usefully served to prevent an attack by
either country, the assumptions underlying deterrence
theory have made assessments of the efficacy of the Cold War
mindset a matter of some controversy.
Most theorists consider that the key
responsibility of an embedded power group is to challenge the
assumptions which comprise the group's own mindset. According to
these commentators, power groups which fail to review or revise
their mindsets with sufficient regularity cannot hold power
indefinitely, as a single mindset is unlikely to possess the
flexibility and adaptability needed to address all future events.
For example, the variations in mindset between
Democratic Party and
Republican Party Presidents in the US may have made that
country more able to challenge assumptions than the Kremlin
with its more static bureaucracy.
Modern military theory attempts to challenge
entrenched mindsets in dealing with asymmetric
warfare, terrorism
and the proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction. In combination, these threats
represent "a revolution in military affairs" and require very rapid
adaptation to new threats and circumstances. In this context, the
cost of not implementing adaptive mindsets cannot be
afforded.
Collective Mindsets
Naturally, the question regarding the embodiment of a collective mindset comes to mind. Erikson’s (1974) analysis of group-identities and what he calls a life-plan seems relevant here. He recounts the example of American Indians, who were meant to undergo a reeducation process meant to imbue a modern ‘life-plan’ which aimed for a house and a richness expressed by filled bank account. Erikson writes that the Indians’ collective historic identity as buffalo hunters was oriented around such fundamentally different reasons/goals that even communication about the divergent ‘life plans’ was itself difficult.There is a double relation between the
institution embodying for example an entrepreneurial
mindset and its entrepreneurial performance. Firstly, an
institution with an entrepreneurial philosophy will set
entrepreneurial goals and strategies as a whole, but maybe even
more importantly, it will foster an entrepreneurial milieu,
allowing each entity to pursue emergent opportunities. In short,
philosophical stance codified in the mind hence as mindset lead to
a climate which in turn causes values which lead to practice.
Collective mindsets in this sense are described
in such works as Hutchin’s “Cognition in the wild” (1995), who
analyzes a whole team of naval navigators as the cognitive unit or
as computational system, or Senges' Knowledge entrepreneurship in
universities (2007). There are also parallels to the emerging field
of ‘collective intelligence’ (e.g. (Zara, 2004)) and exploiting the
‘Wisdom of the crowds’ (Surowiecki, 2005) of stakeholders . Zara
notes that since collective reflection is more explicit, discursive
and conversational it therefore needs a good gestell – especially
when it comes to information and communication technology.
References
Erikson, E. H. (1974). Identitaet und
Lebenszyklus: Surkamp
Hutchins, E. (1995). Cognition in the wild.
Cambridge, Mass. ; London: MIT Press.
Senges, M.(2007). Knowledge entrepreneurship in
universities: Practice and strategy in the case of internet based
innovation appropriation
Surowiecki, J. (2005). The wisdom of crowds : why
the many are smarter than the few. London: Abacus.
Zara, O. (2004). Managing collective
intelligence: Towards a new corporate governance: www.axiopole.com.
http://www.axiopole.com/pdf/Managing_collective_intelligence.pdf
See also
mentality in German: Mentalität
mentality in Hebrew: דפוס חשיבה
mentality in Russian: Менталитет
mentality in Albanian: Mendësia
mentality in Serbian: Менталитет
mentality in Swedish: Mindset
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
IQ,
Vernunft, acuity, acumen, apprehension, attitude, bent, brain, brains, caliber, capacity, comprehension, conception, consciousness, deductive
power, discourse of reason, discursive reason, disposition, esemplastic
power, esprit, frame of
mind, gray matter, head,
headpiece, ideation, inclination, integrative
power, intellect,
intellection,
intellectual faculty, intellectual grasp, intellectual power,
intellectualism,
intellectuality,
intelligence,
intelligence quotient, judgement, knowledge, mens, mental age, mental capacity,
mental grasp, mental ratio, mind, mind-set, mother wit, native
wit, nous, outlook, power of mind, power of
reason, psyche, ratio, rationality, reason, reasoning, reasoning faculty,
reasoning power, sanity,
scope of mind, sense,
smarts, temperament, thinking power,
understanding,
view, wise man, wit