CONCEPT
The Hierarchy of Leverage Points
Meadows's 1999 ranking of twelve places to intervene in a system — from the
weakest parameter adjustments at the bottom to the
paradigm shifts at the top.
Donella Meadows's 1999 essay
Leverage Points: Places to Intervene in a System ranks twelve points of intervention from least to most powerful, demonstrating that the places where people most naturally intervene — parameters, surface-level adjustments — produce the least systemic change. The most powerful interventions operate at the paradigm level, which is also the hardest to see. The hierarchy is counterintuitive by design: the system makes the weakest interventions visible and the strongest interventions invisible. Applied to the AI transition, the hierarchy reveals that nearly all current policy responses — retraining funds, disclosure mandates, safety standards — operate at the bottom, producing the appearance of action without touching the feedback structures that produce the behaviors those responses are trying to change.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The hierarchy ascends through twelve stations: parameters, buffer sizes, stock-and-flow structures, delays, balancing feedback loops, reinforcing feedback loops, information flows, rules, self-organization, goals, paradigm, and the power to transcend paradigms. Each