The Big Bang Theory | Theory of a Deadman | music theory | probability theory | theory | Theory of relativity | theory of relativity | Social learning theory | Game Theory (band) | Game Theory | Conspiracy theory | Music theory | K-theory | AP Music Theory | Piaget's theory of cognitive development | Federal Rules of Civil Procedure | conspiracy theory | Civil Procedure Acts Repeal Act 1879 | Theory of Relativity | Theory | Terror management theory | Invariant theory | information theory | graph theory | Galois theory | Einstein–Cartan theory | Conspiracy Theory with Jesse Ventura | Chaos theory | Terror Management Theory | representation theory |
Scharmer introduced the concept of "presencing" —learning from the emerging future— in his bestselling books Theory U and Presence (the latter co-authored with P. Senge, J. Jaworski, and B. S. Flowers), which have been translated into fifteen languages.