Hi David,
Thanks. I think that’s a different direction. Mostly I'm working pragmatically in the realm of meta-analysis and predicting dynamics of behaviours, including of meta-analysis and behaviour prediction of theories.
So, with Wittgenstein, questions would be about the implications for how it shapes theory development in other realms of taking Wittgenstein's two positions? What things would be omitted by theories developed on the basis of each of Wittgenstein's paths? What things would be over emphasised? How do the value, effectiveness and efficiency of prediction change? What is predictable and what not in case of each pathway? How coherent, elegant, unambiguous and accessible are the theories based on each pathway? Etc.
These are questions that can guide the best directions of theory development in a discipline.
Design hasn't done particularly well to date in its theory development, so identifying some best ways forward seems to be a useful thing to do.
Best wishes,
Terence
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Dr Terence Love
PhD(UWA), BA(Hons) Engin. PGCEd, FDRS, PMACM, MISI
Love Services Pty Ltd
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-----Original Message-----
From: [log in to unmask] [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of [log in to unmask]
Sent: Saturday, 20 February 2016 12:13 PM
To: phd-design <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Re: Assume fixed number of colours in design?
> On 20 Feb 2016, at 2:21 AM, Gunnar Swanson <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> Color is not a wave length and a wave length is not color. Color is not a set of wave lengths and a set of wave lengths are not color. While words may be used to attempt description of color, words are not colors in the sense that Terry seemed to be asking about.
Hi all,
As an aside, there are some interesting notes on this and related problems of colour descriptions in the Remarks on Colour by Ludwig Wittgenstein.
These Remarks signal the moment of fracture between Wittgenstein’s thinking in the Tractatus and his later work in the Philosophical Investigations.
Terry, it often seems to me that you tend to think in the logical positivist manner, which drew inspiration from Wittgenstein’s Tractatus. Others on this list take their inspiration in part from Wittgenstein’s later work of the Philosophical Investigations.
A useful book that gives a detailed gloss on Wittgenstein’s struggles with colour, which so radically changed his thinking, can be found in:
José Medina (2002)
The Unity of Wittgenstein's Philosophy: Necessity, Intelligibility, and Normativity
David
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