Hi Birger,
I agree with you in principle. At the highest level of abstraction and analysis, all human activities "are dedicated to asking the big questions placed before us: "What is true? Why does it matter? How can we move society forward?" But then, we need to develop the details .... and we start seeing things differently.
What about The Two Cultures phenomenon (C.P. Snow)? Physicists and Cuturologists cannot stand each other. Furthermore, even scholars working within different paradigms cannot stand each other.
Best wishes,
Lubomir
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From: PhD-Design - This list is for discussion of PhD studies and related research in Design [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Birger Sevaldson
Sent: Wednesday, July 29, 2015 8:48 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: a Cross paper
Hello friends
In the wake of the discussions on the knowledge base of design i wanted to share this quote from John Maeda with you.
Maeda is both a scientist and artist. Are not designers possitioned right in the wonderful cross section between both?
John Maeda:
Art and science. To those who practice neither, they seem like polar opposites, one data-driven, the other driven by emotion. One dominated by technical introverts, the other by expressive eccentrics. For those of us involved in either field today (and many of us have a hand in both), we know that the similarities between how artists and scientists work far outweigh their stereotypical differences. Both are dedicated to asking the big questions placed before us: "What is true? Why does it matter? How can we move society forward?" Both search deeply, and often wanderingly, for these answers. We know that the scientist's laboratory and the artist's studio are two of the last places reserved for open-ended inquiry, for failure to be a welcome part of the process, for learning to occur by a continuous feedback loop between thinking and doing. (Maeda, 2013)
Maeda, J. (2013). Artists and Scientists: More Alike Than Different. Scientific American. Retrieved February 17, 2015, from http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/guest-blog/2013/07/11/artists-and-scientists-more-alike-than-different/
Birger Sevaldson (PhD)
Professor at Institute of Design
Oslo School of Architecture and Design
Norway
Phone (0047) 9118 9544
www.birger-sevaldson.no
www.systemsorienteddesign.net
www.ocean-designresearch.net
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