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Glossary›Social Field Theory

Glossary

Social Field Theory

A framework describing how the quality of collective consciousness shapes group outcomes, focusing on the relational and attentional conditions from which social action emerges.

What is Social Field Theory?

Social Field Theory describes the invisible relational and attentional conditions that shape how groups think, sense, and act together. The term refers to the structure of relationships among individuals, groups, organizations, and systems that gives rise to collective behaviors and outcomes. It operates as a deeper layer of systems thinking that accounts for the quality of consciousness from which collective action emerges.

Unlike traditional social theory that focuses on external structures or individual psychology, social field theory examines the dynamic space between people—the field of awareness, intention, and presence that determines whether groups repeat past patterns or sense into emerging possibilities. The concept refers to the relational and attentional conditions shaping collective behavior and outcomes.

Origins & Lineage

The term “field theory” in psychology was developed by German-American psychologist Kurt Lewin, who was closely allied with the Gestalt psychologists. Lewin developed field theory in the 1940s, proposing that behavior is a function of both person and environment (B=f(P,E)).

French social scientist Pierre Bourdieu later used “field” as one of his core concepts, defining a field as a setting in which agents and their social positions are located. There are three major variants of field theory in the social sciences: the social-psychological perspective associated with Kurt Lewin, the stratification emphasis in Pierre Bourdieu’s sociology, and the interorganization relations institutionalism associated with Paul DiMaggio and Walter Powell.

In conscious and spiritual communities, social field theory most commonly refers to the work of Otto Scharmer, a senior lecturer at MIT and co-founder of the Presencing Institute, who introduced the concept of presencing in his books Theory U (2007) and Presence (2004, co-authored with Peter Senge and others). Scharmer linked his early experiences with biodynamic agriculture to his later interest in how invisible factors such as attention, relationships, and awareness shape outcomes in social and organizational systems, an idea he articulated through the concept of the social field. Scharmer situates Theory U within traditions of systems thinking, organizational learning, and action research associated with scholars such as Jay Forrester, Donella Meadows, Kurt Lewin, Chris Argyris, Donald Schön, Ed Schein, and Peter Senge.

How It’s Practiced

Social field work begins with attention to the quality of listening and presence in group settings. The foundational capacity is listening—to others, to oneself, and to what emerges from the collective. Practitioners cultivate what Scharmer calls “four levels of listening”: downloading (confirming existing views), factual (paying attention to new data), empathic (seeing through another’s eyes), and generative (sensing from the emerging future).

The core practice involves moving through a U-shaped process. Moving down the left side of the U is about opening up and dealing with the resistance of thought, emotion, and will; moving up the right side is about intentionally reintegrating the intelligence of the head, heart, and hand in the context of practical applications. The preparation for presencing requires the tuning of three instruments: the open mind, the open heart, and the open will. This opening process is not passive but an active sensing together as a group.

Social Presencing Theater (SPT) is a practice-based method that uses embodied and movement-based approaches to explore social systems and collective dynamics. The method was developed by Arawana Hayashi and is described as a way of making social fields perceptible through spatial awareness, gesture, and collective sensing.

Other practices include sensing journeys (visiting stakeholders to understand a system from multiple perspectives), stakeholder interviews, 3D sculpting (physically mapping system dynamics with objects), and prototyping (testing ideas through small experiments rather than elaborate planning).

Social Field Theory Today

Seekers encounter social field work primarily through the Presencing Institute’s global programs and local communities of practice. Scharmer with colleagues at MIT conducted 150 interviews with entrepreneurs and innovators in science, business, and society and extended the basic principles into a theory of learning and management. The work has spread through MIT courses, online programs (u.lab), regional hubs, and certification programs.

Organizations apply social field theory to systems change, cross-sector collaboration, organizational transformation, and social innovation. The Theory U framework is now used by thousands of organizations across climate, finance, education, and social innovation. The approach addresses what Scharmer calls the “blind spot” in leadership—the inner place from which leaders operate determines what they create, yet this interior condition rarely receives attention in conventional change efforts.

The framework has influenced movements at the intersection of contemplative practice and social change, appearing in dialogue with other traditions like Joanna Macy’s Work That Reconnects, Thomas Hübl’s collective trauma work, and Margaret Wheatley’s work on warrior leadership.

Common Misconceptions

Social field theory is not a technique for quick organizational fixes or a set of facilitation tools divorced from inner development. The work requires sustained practice and cannot be reduced to a workshop format. Presencing is difficult and will take time and practice. The process surrounding presencing is vague, without specific steps to take, nor does it provide a mechanism to improve presencing skills over time.

It is also distinct from—though related to—Rupert Sheldrake’s morphic field theory, which proposes non-local fields that transmit biological and behavioral information across time and space. While both address invisible organizing principles, Sheldrake’s work focuses on memory and habit formation in nature, whereas Scharmer’s addresses awareness and emergence in human systems.

Social field theory does not bypass structural analysis or substitute individual awareness for systemic change. It positions inner development and outer transformation as interdependent, not opposed. The framework explicitly addresses power, inequality, and institutional dysfunction—it simply insists that changing systems requires changing the consciousness that created them.

How to Begin

Start with Theory U: Leading from the Future as It Emerges by C. Otto Scharmer (2016, second edition) or the more accessible The Essentials of Theory U (2018). The Presencing Institute offers a free online course called u.lab that runs multiple times per year, introducing the framework through video lectures, peer coaching circles called “coaching circles,” and practical exercises.

Two activities that support presencing include meditation and walking in nature. Both activities allow you to step outside of yourself and see yourself as part of a larger picture. Begin a simple practice: before meetings, pause to notice the quality of your listening. Are you defending, downloading old ideas, or genuinely open to what wants to emerge?

For groups, consider hosting a “sensing journey”—visit three stakeholders in a system you’re trying to understand, listen deeply without agenda, and reconvene to harvest insights. The Presencing Institute website (presencing.org) offers free resources, toolkits, and connection to regional hubs practicing this work.

Related terms

presencingtheory ucollective intelligencesystems thinkingconscious leadershipemergence
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