Design everywhere
Wednesday, October 11th, 2006There are some things that are worth putting a lot of time and effort into. Design is one. Now, it’s not possible to focus on everything worthy of design all at once – there’s just too much. For example, I seem to have spent the last three hours tweaking, fiddling, replacing… all just working to put the right image on to the top of this website. Thank you to [Andrew Davidhazy->http://www.rit.edu/~andpph/] for allowing me to use one of his outstanding splash images on this site. All of the things I have not (yet?) focussed on, such as fonts, widgets, even good copy – maybe they benefit slightly by having something designed nearby.
I’m interested in thinking about the places design can operate. For example, I work alongside engineers at my university, and one of them recently remarked in a meeting that he thinks engineers should devote more time to studying ethics. In his design labs, he instructs the students to consider ethics as a design constraint. I would go further – to my way of thinking, ethics is a design problem. Questions that don’t have pat answers include: “What to do?” “Why?” “Why do I find this particular ‘why’ reason appropriate in this context?” In other words, an ethical person isn’t someone who somehow just “knows the right thing to do.” Rather, a person acts ethically when he or she takes the time that’s available to evaluate alternatives and unearth the assumptions that point toward possible choices.
With this view, it seems insufficient to me for students to study and discuss “case studies,” narratives that usually describe projects that went very poorly. Case studies are good for people who study ethics, but to learn how to act ethically, students need to think about designing their decisions.