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‘Critical systemic thinking as a philosophy for “design” practice.’

Bednar, Peter LU and Welch, Christine (2008) ALPIS2008: Fourth Edition p.67-72
Abstract
Some systems approaches tend to conceptualize social systems as collective entities, in which emergent properties of the whole can render individuals within a social system invisible. As critical systemic thinkers, however, we choose to see a social system as an emergent property of the interactions between unique individuals whose social relations are of interest. Thus, within the field of critical social research, we include work with a focus on sense-making and learning in the context of systems of human interaction. Such work tends to encourage challenging of taken-for-granted assumptions and ‘received wisdom’. It is oriented towards supporting individuals and groups to reflect in context, to learn and hence to bring about beneficial... (More)
Some systems approaches tend to conceptualize social systems as collective entities, in which emergent properties of the whole can render individuals within a social system invisible. As critical systemic thinkers, however, we choose to see a social system as an emergent property of the interactions between unique individuals whose social relations are of interest. Thus, within the field of critical social research, we include work with a focus on sense-making and learning in the context of systems of human interaction. Such work tends to encourage challenging of taken-for-granted assumptions and ‘received wisdom’. It is oriented towards supporting individuals and groups to reflect in context, to learn and hence to bring about beneficial change for themselves. In this class of research, we include work influenced by, for example, Gregory Bateson. His taxonomy of orders of learning, and his exploration of human interaction have informed work of many other researchers. His insights have been influential in highlighting concepts such as ‘otherness’, ‘in-betweenness’ and ‘immanence’ as relevant aspects to explore in relation to human systems. Another author whose work has informed that of many other researchers is Claudio Ciborra. An on-going critique of rationality characterizes his contribution to investigation of human systems. Ciborra highlights differences between logical descriptions of social behavior that people make and their actual, contextualized experiences. This social behavior includes play as an emergent property of improvisation in problem solving practice and expressionism as communicative practice. This paper will discuss the contributions of critical systemic thinkers to the development and application of critical social research. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Social Practice Design, Contextual Dependency., Phenomenology, Critical Systemic Thinking
host publication
Program and Discussion Papers
pages
5 pages
publisher
Department of Sociology and Social Research: University of Trento
conference name
ALPIS2008: Fourth Edition
conference location
Antica Vetreria; Carisolo, Trento, Italy
conference dates
2008-02-09 - 2008-02-12
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
8eaa0d9d-9343-4384-a767-1ecc9bb7f803 (old id 1486495)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 10:12:35
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:57:27
@inproceedings{8eaa0d9d-9343-4384-a767-1ecc9bb7f803,
  abstract     = {{Some systems approaches tend to conceptualize social systems as collective entities, in which emergent properties of the whole can render individuals within a social system invisible. As critical systemic thinkers, however, we choose to see a social system as an emergent property of the interactions between unique individuals whose social relations are of interest. Thus, within the field of critical social research, we include work with a focus on sense-making and learning in the context of systems of human interaction. Such work tends to encourage challenging of taken-for-granted assumptions and ‘received wisdom’. It is oriented towards supporting individuals and groups to reflect in context, to learn and hence to bring about beneficial change for themselves. In this class of research, we include work influenced by, for example, Gregory Bateson. His taxonomy of orders of learning, and his exploration of human interaction have informed work of many other researchers. His insights have been influential in highlighting concepts such as ‘otherness’, ‘in-betweenness’ and ‘immanence’ as relevant aspects to explore in relation to human systems. Another author whose work has informed that of many other researchers is Claudio Ciborra. An on-going critique of rationality characterizes his contribution to investigation of human systems. Ciborra highlights differences between logical descriptions of social behavior that people make and their actual, contextualized experiences. This social behavior includes play as an emergent property of improvisation in problem solving practice and expressionism as communicative practice. This paper will discuss the contributions of critical systemic thinkers to the development and application of critical social research.}},
  author       = {{Bednar, Peter and Welch, Christine}},
  booktitle    = {{Program and Discussion Papers}},
  keywords     = {{Social Practice Design; Contextual Dependency.; Phenomenology; Critical Systemic Thinking}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{67--72}},
  publisher    = {{Department of Sociology and Social Research: University of Trento}},
  title        = {{‘Critical systemic thinking as a philosophy for “design” practice.’}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/5487963/1495161.pdf}},
  year         = {{2008}},
}