Quote Me
"Management is the art of saying 'Good Question' until you find somebody to blame"
- MDG
How about some interesting stuff on the limits of subjectivity rolled up in a presentation about how architecture (buildings and such) is like IT!??!
I quote (emphasis added by me):
"The essence of the experiments is that you take the two things you are trying to compare and ask, for each one, is my wholeness increasing in the presence of this object? How about in the presence of this one? Is it increasing more or less? You might say this is a strange question; What if the answer is Don't know or They don't have any effect on me? Perfectly reasonable! That can happen. But the resolution is easy. What turns out to happen is that if you say to a person �Yes, it is a difficult question, it might even sound a bit nutty. But anyway, please humor me and just answer the question.� Then it turns out that there is quite a striking statistical agreement, 80-90%, very strong, as strong a level of agreement as one gets in any experiments in social science."
- from http://www.patternlanguage.com/archive/ieee/ieeetext.htm
The possibility of an objective and universal sense of 'wholeness' is pretty cool, I think... Something like a person's 'wholeness' smells like mumbo-jumbo and yet here is somebody sighting 'striking statistical agreement' on what it is...?
Just a link for now (handheld users will have to read it at their desks I'm afraid):
The Origins of Pattern Theory
the Future of the Theory,
And The Generation of a Living World
http://www.patternlanguage.com/archive/ieee/ieeetext.htm
This is the author of the forthcoming book mentioned in the previous post. I'll try and make some comments in the next few days.
In particular the author talks about the patterns he developed for architecture (as in buildings and such) actually having a 'moral' component. He suggests that the next step to translating the concept of design patterns to IT will introduce this moral component.
I think he's right.
I talk about architectures all the time; and I therefore talk about architects - the people who design those architectures.
I'm stealing a word here - I'm not the only one. The whole IT industry also does it. So I'll admit I'm looking forward to this series (link to Amazon) coming out in July.
The first book in the series is:
The Nature of Order: An Essay on the Art of Building and the Nature of the Universe. The Phenomenon of Life, Book One
by Christopher Alexander
MWT talks about architect as the delineated shared understanding of a team of collaborating individuals. This shared environment could include anything, I guess - includes good old physical shared space - but I imagine the principles of designing such architectures are more universal than that.
The Amazon review says things like:
'Christopher Alexander, the humble messiah of good architectural design, invites readers to get comfortable with their inner judgments... thinking deeply about the nature of his work. Frustrated with the 20th century's reluctance to acknowledge human commonality and reliance on Cartesian mechanism, he urges us to rethink our understanding of space itself...'
The IT industry has already stolen the concept of 'design patterns' from people like this author - and that was for the better. Let's steal some more.
Remember when everybody was complaining about stove-pipe organisations � organisations in which all the departments were operating as silos?
Well I've noticed a new trend. The more I see 'governance offices' and 'programme offices' in action the more it is apparent that governance, monitoring, scheduling, etc, are starting to operate in their own silos!
If this isn't an indication that something is wrong with management I don't know what is. Anybody else noticing this?
Yeah, sure it's another Ayn Rand rip-off � but it's quality content non-the-less. Check out ImportanceOfPhilosophy.com and in particular the section on Epistemology.
MWT has this theory which goes something like: