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[S3 Discussion] Dilemmas in a General Theory of Planning #6
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While reading this I recalled we discussed Wicked Problems while in design school. I'm not quite sure what the lesson was back then, but I recall learning to avoid them somehow Couple notes:
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these first few paragraphs are really reminiscent of the current situation of anti-expert opinion, though the way they write about it sounds condescending/elitist (though a lot of coverage around the brexit vote sounds the same way 🤔)
really striking how this describes the present as well:
I wonder if those two groups were composed similarly to the way they are today? e.g. transhumanist futurist-types fall into the former, is there an analogue in the 1970's? planning used to be about efficiency, now it also asks if whatever is to be done should be done in the first place
systems analysts thought they could solve anyone's problems in a straightforward way; turns out it's really, really hard
maybe where we are in solving such problems is where medicine was when the solution to many bodily issues was amputation...e.g. we know there problem is somewhere in your leg, we don't know exactly where, so let's cleave the whole thing off. even with modern medicine, drugs are really imprecise...maybe the other end of this analogy is "acupuncture", extremely precise and targeted (though I don't know how effective a treatment acupuncture is considered?)
i like this acknowledgement of no "end of history", social progress is a continual process and we can't ever delude ourselves into thinking we're "done" with it part of what makes wicked problems so difficult (aside from identifying and defining them in the first place) is that you're not always sure if they've even been "solved"; if they seem like they have been solved, you're can't even be sure it was your intervention that did it, and solving it for one person might not be the same as solving it for another (there is no objective metric for declaring a problem "solved"). furthermore, the space of solutions is effectively infinite/not well defined. the definition of a problem typically implies certain solutions (e.g. the paper's poverty example), and since with wicked problems no one can agree on solutions, no one can even agree on the problem definition - "The formulation of a wicked problem is the problem!" although, with the poverty example, those all seem like plausible causes, wouldn't "solving" it involve having multiple people/organizations solve each aspect of it? wicked problems are also difficult because any attempted intervention can alter the dynamics of the problem, so in some sense you only ever have one shot at fixing it in its current form. wicked problems are "essentially unique" in that even though there may be similarities between two, they may only be superficial, there may be hidden components that cause them to have very different dynamics, and so it's hard to say if you can ever take a method which worked for one problem and apply it to another. every wicked problem can be described as a symptom of another problem; they are all entangled and enmeshed in each other and they are multi-scale, even fractal in some way. how do you decide at which level to approach the problem? (again, why not have multiple people/organizations approach it at multiple levels simultaneously?)
again so weird how this feels like it describes today
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dump of notes from vim:
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Rittel & Webber, defines "wicked" problems
http://www.uctc.net/mwebber/Rittel+Webber+Dilemmas+General_Theory_of_Planning.pdf
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