Joe Moran: Excerpt from “Interdisciplinarity”

This book is about interdisciplinary research on a broader scale. The introduction traces a history of disciplines and follows up by a “defence of interdisciplinarity.” It’s a great read at about 18 pages.
Here’s the pdf of the introduction: joe_moran

Here are my notes in reading this introduction:

11/17/11
Joe Moran, Interdisciplinarity, Routlege….

  • Two meanings of discipline: body of knowledge, and obedience/order (2)
  • hierarchical in nature, from latin disciplina,  meaning taking orders from an elder
  • the term “discipline” is “caught up in questions about the relationship between knowledge and power.” (2)
  • funny Roberta Frank on “fields” as cows and mud, versus “discipline” as enshrined, clean… (3)
  • Classical division —Aristotle’s order: theology/mathematics/physics, then ethics/politics, and finally the arts/engineering/poetics (4); assigning of value — more and less esteemed disciplines
  • Modern era: universities and states
  • Late Middle Age — universities of Salerno, Bologna, Paris, Oxford and Cambridge replace medieval schools; discipline starts to mean profession, such as medicine, law and theology (5)
  • However until 18 C. there was a core curriculum of liberal arts
  • trivium (logic, grammar, rhetoric)
  • quadrivium  (arithmetic, geometry, astronomy and music)
  • University from latin universitias, meaning “universal” or “whole”
  • The Enlightenment (17, 18 c) pushed disciplines — reason-driven, all about instituting methodologies; this agreed with the overlapping scientific revolution (16, 17c) Copernicus, Newton, Gallileo, etc
  • Parallel tendencies to be holistic and  yet subdivide into disciplines — through encyclopedias (7)
  • Giambattista VIco (18 c) early promoter of interdisciplinary (7)
  • Kant (18 c) privileges reason through philosphy
  • Early duality between specialized and liberal arts education (10)
  • Comte argues for applying scientific method to other areas of knowledge (11)
  • Neitzsche critical (and lamenting) of the scientific man as superior to the philosopher (19 c) (12)
  • Industrialized and technologized society demanded specializations (13)
  • Our question: Where and since when do Ph. D. programs in design exist?
  • Clark argues disciplines are discursive in that they promote certain languages and modes of thought, and exclude others (14)
  • Epistemology — the study of knowledge
  • Interdisciplinarity is about addressing problems that cannot be answered within existing disciplines (15)
  • Interdisciplinarity is ” any form of dialogue or interaction between two or more disciplines;  the level, type, purpose and effect of this interaction remain to be examined” (16)
  • Roland Barthes (1977: 155) “it begins effectively when the solidarity of the old disciplines breaks down…in the interests of a new object and a new language neither of which has  a place in the field of sciences that were to be brought peacefully together”….mutation
  • politics of teaching (17)
  • intellectually promiscuous (17)

notes from BERKELEY and STANFORD

STANFORD

interesting problems lie between the disciplines
students don’t come in thinking information is divided, they wonder why we compartmentalize it
building our way into the future
constantly redesigning curriculum
design is not fully realized until it is engaged
problem based learning
if you are not getting in trouble you are not doing anything interesting
make something real happen
what can we do with social media to change things
space creates behavior, allows students to self author
building is thinking
you start with empathy and the direction of the world

 

 

BEREKELEY

modular space inspires freedom- fixed, flexible, fluid
collaborative space for faculty to work
ideo rules for diverging
no matter what major you are you respond to good design
when you are highly educated you are stripped of collaboration- students are ready to collaborate
experiential learning
Sara Beckmann
have a purpose room
what is our shared intellectual model? We are all having separate conversations about design and process.
Pact underwear an example of successful collaboration out of Berkeley
teaching to build community, respect and patience