Facilities – FM Magazine, Vol. 21, No.1/2, 2003
Health is a stage of complete physical, mental and social well-being
and not merely an absence of disease or infirmity (The World Health Organization).
The average Western person spends up to 85 percent of their lives either
inside a building or inside a vehicle conveying them from one building
to another. The prevailing site conditions and the actual siting, design,
construction and maintenance of a building can have a profound effect
on the health of the occupants.
The Boiled Frog Syndrome argues that, like the frog which continues to
adjust to the increasing water temperature until it gets boiled alive,
we are continually adjusting our lives in such a way that we are becoming
complicit to irreversible change and damage.
The book is organized into two parts. In the first part the author introduces
us to a range of natural and artificial phenomena, and the effect that
each has on humanity. In the second part he proposes an important set
of ideas which relate to design rooted in history.
The author emphasises that the challenge for the 21st century is to synthesise
and bring together the wonders of modern technology with the integrity
of ancient spiritual wisdom and the understanding of the eternal laws
of nature and the universe.
The book is significant for facilities managers and other professionals
who have to address organizational health and the need to create healthy
and harmonious environments.
The overall message of the book is very simple – do not be a boiled
frog!
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