Design for a Better World: Meaningful, Sustainable, Humanity CenteredMIT Press, 21 mars 2023 - 376 pages How human behavior brought our world to the brink, and how human behavior can save us. The world is a mess. Our dire predicament, from collapsing social structures to the climate crisis, has been millennia in the making and can be traced back to the erroneous belief that the earth’s resources are infinite. The key to change, says Don Norman, is human behavior, covered in the book’s three major themes: meaning, sustainability, and humanity-centeredness. Emphasize quality of life, not monetary rewards; restructure how we live to better protect the environment; and focus on all of humanity. Design for a Better World presents an eye-opening diagnosis of where we’ve gone wrong and a clear prescription for making things better. Norman proposes a new way of thinking, one that recognizes our place in a complex global system where even simple behaviors affect the entire world. He identifies the economic metrics that contribute to the harmful effects of commerce and manufacturing and proposes a recalibration of what we consider important in life. His experience as both a scientist and business executive gives him the perspective to show how to make these changes while maintaining a thriving economy. Let the change begin with this book before it’s too late |
Table des matières
Almost Everything Artificial Has Been Designed | 3 |
Our Artificial Way of Life Is Unsustainable | 11 |
Why History Matters | 15 |
Precisebut ArtificialMeasurements | 27 |
If Technology Got Us into Todays Situation Maybe Technology Can Get Us Out | 39 |
Meaningful Sustainable and Humanity Centered | 47 |
COMMUNICATE IN UNDERSTANDABLE WAYS | 55 |
The Need for Meaning | 57 |
Moving from Humans to Humanity | 181 |
Democratizing Design and Development | 187 |
People Designing for Themselves | 195 |
An Approach to Large Complex Systems | 203 |
Where Incrementalism Muddling Through Fails | 209 |
Incremental Modular Design | 213 |
When Large Multidisciplinary Projects Are Necessary | 217 |
Dealing with Scale | 225 |
Measurement in the Physical Sciences | 63 |
9 | 65 |
Measuring What Is Important to People | 67 |
The Gross Domestic Product | 79 |
What Measures Are Truly Important to People? | 87 |
Human Behavior and Economics | 103 |
REVERSE AND REPAIR THE HARM DONE TO THE ECOSYSTEMS OF THE WORLD | 113 |
We Live in the Age of Waste | 115 |
How Did the World Get into Todays Quandary? | 119 |
Sustainability Has Multiple Components and Implications | 125 |
Design Products Sustainability and the Circular Economy | 131 |
The Practical Difficulties of Implementing Circular Design | 139 |
Sustainable Robust and Resilient Systems | 147 |
Peoples Understanding of Systems | 155 |
Working with Complex Sociotechnical Systems | 167 |
It Is Not Too Late | 177 |
ADDRESS ALL ASPECTS OF THE WORLD RELEVANT TO LIFE | 179 |
Necessary but Not Sufficient | 231 |
THE MAJOR CHALLENGE | 237 |
Why Change Is Difficult | 239 |
People Will Mobilize for a Common Goal | 249 |
What Must Change? | 251 |
The Dominance of Technology | 265 |
The Future of Technology | 275 |
LEARN REFLECT DECIDE ACT | 283 |
What Can Be Done? | 285 |
What Can We Do? | 291 |
The Major Points of This Book | 301 |
Acknowledgments | 311 |
Notes | 315 |
Bibliography | 335 |
| 351 | |
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Design for a Better World: Meaningful, Sustainable, Humanity Centered Donald A. Norman Aucun aperçu disponible - 2023 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
actions activities air conditioners artificial automobile causality cause chapter circular economy climate change companies complex sociotechnical systems complex system components cost-benefit analysis costs countries create dashboard Development difficult Don Norman doughnut ecological economic economists Ellen MacArthur energy environment everyday example experiences feedback global Global North goals governments groups harm human behavior humanity-centered design IKEA impact important Industrial Revolution issues large number lives loops MacArthur Foundation machines major manufacturing materials meaningful means measure methods models modern modules multiple natural pandemic people's planned obsolescence plants political problem Psychology recycling require resilient result reused role scale schismogenesis scientific scientists simple social society solutions solve Space Adaptation Syndrome stories structure Sustainable temperature things tion today's understand variables vestibular system waste wicked problems windcatchers workers
