Bigness
: Seeking bigness can be taxing and requires a "healthy dissatisfaction with the present" and a constant striving for improvement. 4. Narrative and Creative Bigness
In the realm of law and economics, notably discussed by Tim Wu, "Bigness" describes the concentration of corporate power and its threat to democracy. bigness
"Bigness" is more than just a measure of physical scale; it is a conceptual framework used across architecture, economics, leadership, and personal growth to describe the impact, complexity, and ethical weight of things that outgrow traditional human dimensions. 1. Architectural Bigness (Rem Koolhaas) : Seeking bigness can be taxing and requires
Culturally, bigness is often equated with success, but modern leadership experts suggest a more nuanced "alignment with the collective good". "Bigness" is more than just a measure of
: Inspired by Justice Louis Brandeis, this perspective advocates for anti-trust actions to decentralize power and adjust institutions to a "human size". 3. Bigness in Leadership and Culture