Dear Chuck
I agree with you. What you say is correlation could be rooted in categorisation and the forming of semantic nets which for me lies at the very heart of new kinds of framing which sets the platform for abductive productions of new design opportunities, futures and compositions that do not yet exist but are also meaningful and valuable at the same time. This is what makes design thinking truly valuable.
Sorry, mid night message more lat when I am fully awake!
M P Ranjan
from my iPad at home
12 February 2015 at 4.20 am IST
Prof M P Ranjan
Independent Academic, Ahmedabad
Adjunct Professor (Design) Ahmedabad University
Author of blog : http://www.designforindia.com
Archive of papers : http://cept.academia.edu/RanjanMP
Sent from my iPad
> On 12-Feb-2015, at 3:35 am, Charles Burnette <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> Dear Alejandra,
>
> Thank you for your response. I had forgotten about Gavin’s work and I will read Cross again.
>
> There has been, as you know, a nice exchange on the list regarding abductive thinking. I remain disappointed in the response regarding correlation, especially, its relationship to abductive thought, analogical thought, and heuristics. I also feel that intentions and interpretation may outweigh explanation for design thinking as compared to scientific thought. As you may imagine, I am most interested in the cognitive modeling that might bring situated intention, interpretation, conceptual modeling, heuristics, valuing, and beliefs together when formulating and communicating a designed outcome. While useful, the process of abduction, in my view, has not yet found an interpretation appropriate to design thinking.
>
> I look forward to your dissertation. Perhaps answers will be there.
> Best wishes,
>
> Chuck
>
>
>> On Feb 9, 2015, at 7:12 PM, Alejandra Poblete <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>>
>> Dear professor Burnette, my ongoing doctoral Thesis is about *abduction* (in
>> the way that Ch. S. Peirce defines it) and its scope within the projectual
>> process.
>>
>> As you certainly know, several authors, within design field, have mentioned
>> abductive reasoning in order to explain what happens in the creative
>> process; for instance:
>>
>> - Nigel Cross (*Designerly ways of knowing*, 2007) do mention abduction as
>> a kind of reasoning designers do (p. 28, 37, 53) and also relates abduction
>> with the "creative leap" (chapter: 4. CREATIVE COGNITION IN DESIGN I: THE
>> CREATIVE LEAP, p. 76)
>> - John Kolko, *Abductive Thinking and Sensemaking: The Drivers of Design
>> Synthesis* - Design Issues: Volume 26, Number 1, Winter 2010 - MIT
>>
>>
>> But, other scholars from education field, and philosophy of science have
>> detected the relation between abduction and design research, like:
>>
>> - Pentti Määttänen, links pragmatic semiotics to the context of design
>> research (*Pragmatist Semiotics as a Framework for Design Research*, Milano
>> 2000)
>> - Gavin Melles, has addressed the relationship between pragmatism and
>> design, both in education and in research, in several publications from
>> 2008 to date. (*An enlarged pragmatist inquiry paradigm for Methodological
>> pluralism in **academic design research*, Journal Artifact, vol 2, 2008 and
>> his lecture: *Pragmatism Matters for Design*, Delft University,
>> Netherlands, 2009)
>>
>>
>> Anyway, *abduction* (abductive reasoning, appositional reasoning or
>> retroductive reasoning), is not only a kind of reasoning, is the very
>> essence of a knowledge theory: Pragmatism. (*Pragmaticism*, as Peirce named
>> his philosophy)
>>
>> I have download your paper to read it with calm. Thank you.
>>
>> best regards
>> ...........................................
>> Alejandra Poblete P.
>> COMUNICACIÓN VISUAL
>> of: 223251239
>> móvil - whatsapp: +56996896490
>>
>> 2015-02-09 14:02 GMT-03:00 Charles Burnette <[log in to unmask]>:
>>
>>> Dear Colleagues,
>>>
>>> I have come to believe that an emphasis on correlation and abductive
>>> thought are characteristic of design thinking, while causal reasoning is
>>> used primarily to validate and implement what is expressed. Designers are
>>> very good at identifying and adapting similarities often through analogies
>>> and metaphors, editing out information that doesn’t suit their objectives.
>>>
>>> I don’t know if either correlation or abductive reasoning have been used
>>> as systematic design or research methods.
>>> Does anyone know of a well documented example of a systematic use of
>>> correlation or abduction in design practice or research?
>>>
>>> I have recently published a paper "Re-cognizing* Components in A Theory of
>>> Design Thinking” (www.independent.academia.edu/charlesburnette <
>>> http://www.independent.academia.edu/charlesburnette>) that describes how
>>> correlation was used heuristically to determine the seven modes of thought
>>> in the theory. Once identified, the modes were correlated with profiles of
>>> different subjects to demonstrate critical thinking, content analysis,
>>> generation of new content, and instrumental application.
>>>
>>> I believe correlation can be an important tool in design research and
>>> practice. But, I don’t believe it has yet been recognized as such.
>>> I hope I’m wrong.
>>>
>>> Thanks for your help or critique.
>>>
>>> Chuck
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
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>>
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> Charles Burnette
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>
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