The quantum view explains the notion of relationships differently. We live in a fuzzy world where boundaries have an elusive nature and seldom mean what we expect them to mean. This aspect might drive us crazy as long as we focus on trying to specify them in terms of cause and effect relationships. Rather, we should try to see past the innumerable fragments to the whole, stepping back far enough to appreciate how things move and change as a coherent entity (Wheatley, 2000).
Being in the flow of the system means that we should participate in complex events occuring at the same time. Every small system participates in an unbroken wholeness (Wheatley, 2000). Activities in one part of the whole create effects that appear in distant places. Due to these unseen connections there is potential value in working anywhere in the system. We never know how our smal activities might affect others through the invisible fabric of our interconnectedness. So, in this quantum age, it is a question of 'critical connections' rather than critical mass.
The nature of the quantum world gives way to a unified whole that transcends our false sense of seperateness. Also, it encourages us to give up positioning things as polarities. We need to stop drawing lines of oppoisng views and try to understand the 'and' of one and one (Wheatley, 2000).
