Klaus,
I couldn’t agree with you more on all you said except for your last point.
I firmly believe that what goes on in a thinker’s mind shapes what they say and do and how they think even in the act of doing or making. I think Design Thinking hasn’t been thought about enough. Many use the term to mean anything they want it to mean; what happens in art schools, a methodology that they can exploit, etc. Few design researchers have taken up the challenge to try to understand some of the knowledge neuroscience has developed and just put the words in some category they find useful. Many years ago, as you know, Irving
Goffman helped us understand how people frame their conversations. That was just opening the door to a deeper understanding of what goes on in the mind during social interaction. I feel we need to oil the hinges of that door and open it to the new findings of how the brain works. When I talk about design thinking I am trying to construct a theory. I have also applied it in design studios, classrooms, workshops, group dynamics, etc on projects of many kinds. I am as devoted to my interests as you are to languaging as communication. Someday they will both come together.
Thanks for your thoughtful remarks.
Chuck
> On Nov 20, 2015, at 3:24 AM, Klaus Krippendorff <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> I am suggesting to stop getting high on the mentalist concept of design thinking and instead work toward improving our design discourse, research, theories, methods, and practices by which the extraordinary role of our profession on the 21st century can be advanced.
Charles Burnette
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