There’s actually a
good reason for changing the coach: a new coach is “fresh” and not biased by past
investments and habits that led the team to underperform. This is why governing
boards of badly performing companies tend to privilege the replacement of their
CEOs rather than take the risk (and the pain) of reforming the companies
themselves. Daniel Kahneman explains this decision in his book Thinking, Fast and Slow. ‘The members of
the board, he writes, do not necessarily believe that the new CEO is more
competent than the one she replaces.’ But they do know that she does not carry
the same commitment to past investments and is therefore better able to ignore the sunk costs of these past
investments in evaluating current opportunities.
This analysis is just
one of the many keys to success and, more importantly, to happiness. If you are
looking for this happiness, try to be your own “new CEO” who is unhindered by
the ‘sunk-cost fallacy’. You might experience two types of pleasures: first the
pleasure (and excitement!) of detecting what keeps you from seeing the new, and
then the pleasure of actually seeing and doing the new. It often doesn’t have
to take much to avoid the sunk-cost fallacy which keeps people for too long in
poor jobs, unhappy marriages, unpromising research projects and unfulfilling lives
they don’t have to live.Saturday, May 31, 2014
Be free, ignore your sunk costs
When a soccer team
loses a match we tend to say ‘the team lost’. But how come it’s rarely the team
but mostly the coach who gets fired when several important matches are lost in
a row? Probably because it’s easier to put the blame on a third person – a facilitator
–than to change the team itself. Especially when the team has players that we
consider to be good and worthy of a second, third or fourth chance.
Monday, May 26, 2014
Les Pays-Bas et l’UNESCO : une histoire d’eau
Tout comme son paysage, la contribution des
Pays-Bas à l’UNESCO se caractérise fortement par le thème de l’eau, à commencer
par les sites néerlandais inscrits au patrimoine mondial de l’UNESCO. Six des
neuf sites constituent un témoignage unique de la façon dont l’homme a mené son
combat contre l’eau ou, parfois, contre l’ennemi.
D’abord, il a fallu aider Dieu pour créer les
Pays-Bas, comme le dit un vieux dicton néerlandais. Pour ce faire, le
Néerlandais a créé la série désormais mondialement célèbre des moulins de
Kinderdijk-Elshout. Ces moulins drainaient en permanence le polder Alblasserwaard, situé sous le
niveau de l’eau comme un tiers des Pays-Bas.
Ensuite, cette méthode a été remplacée par
des stations de pompage à vapeur telle que la station de D.F. Wouda, baptisée du
nom de l’ingénieur qui l’a conçu. Cette station de pompage, toujours en fonction
aujourd’hui, a été inscrite sur la liste du patrimoine mondial, car elle est la
plus grande et la plus puissante installation à vapeur à des fins hydrauliques jamais
construite.
Il en va de même pour l’élégant système de
canaux concentriques qui a fait connaître Amsterdam dans le monde entier comme
« la Venise du Nord ». Ce site exceptionnel du patrimoine mondial est né,
lui aussi, de l’idée de transformer des terres marécageuses en terres
habitables, cette fois-ci en les drainant par des canaux en arcs concentriques
et en remblayant les espaces intermédiaires.
Cette tension permanente entre l’homme et l’eau
qui caractérise le paysage néerlandais, a aussi été utilisée pour attaquer et
chasser les armées ennemies. En témoigne la ligne de défense d’Amsterdam construite
au XIXème siècle, composée de 45 forts équipés d’artillerie. Ce réseau agissait
de concert avec des inondations temporaires déclenchées à partir des polders et
d’un système complexe de canaux et d’écluses. Il est le seul exemple existant
d’une fortification continue reposant sur le principe de la maîtrise de l’eau.
La première mise en œuvre de ce principe remonte au XVIème siècle, avec la construction
du Oude Hollandse Waterlinie, lors de la lutte pour l’indépendance vis-à-vis de
l’Espagne.
L’eau ne caractérise pas seulement la
contribution néerlandaise au secteur de la culture, mais aussi au secteur des sciences.
Premièrement, les Pays-Bas hébergent et cofinancent le centre de catégorie 1
UNESCO-IHE à Delft, le plus grand institut de recherche et d’enseignement en
hydrologie au monde. Depuis sa création en 1957, l’Institut a constitué un réseau
de plus de 15.000 anciens étudiants, parmi lesquels l’actuel Roi des Pays-Bas,
S.M. Willem-Alexander.
Deuxièmement, les Pays-Bas hébergent un
centre de catégorie 2 dans le domaine de l’eau, à savoir l’International
Groundwater Resources Assessment Center (IGRAC). Ce centre a pour
objectif de faciliter la gestion durable des eaux souterraines, en fournissant
aux pays concernés l’assistance scientifique nécessaire pour les mesurer et les
gérer. Cette mission favorise la stabilité et le maintien de la paix, car
souvent ces précieuses ressources sont fragiles et partagées par plusieurs
pays.
Troisièmement, les Pays-Bas sont membres du
Conseil intergouvernemental du Programme hydrologique international (PHI). Les
36 pays membres de ce conseil travaillent actuellement à la mise en œuvre d’un
agenda scientifique appelé « PHI VIII », pour faire face ensemble aux défis
liés à l’eau tels que la sécheresse, la pollution et les inondations.
D’autres priorités des Pays-Bas à l’UNESCO
sont les droits de l’homme, en particulier les droits des femmes, les droits
des personnes lesbiennes, gaies, bisexuelles et transgenres (LGBT) et la
liberté de l’expression. En novembre 2013, le Ministre de l’Education, de la
Culture et des Sciences, Mme Jet Bussemaker, a signé un accord avec l’UNESCO
pour soutenir la lutte contre le harcèlement homophobe à l’école. Les Pays-Bas
ont également financé des projets en Tunisie pour promouvoir l’inclusion de
filles dans le processus décisionnel démocratique, et pour la protection des
journalistes. Ce dernier thème est aussi fortement appuyé par les Pays-Bas en
tant que membre du Conseil intergouvernemental du Programme international pour
le développement de la Communication. Car non seulement, sans les journalistes,
la liberté de la presse n’existerait pas, mais aussi parce que la liberté de la
presse est une niche dans le mandat de l’UNESCO qui lui donne une
responsabilité importante dans le système des Nations unies.
Le rôle des Pays-Bas au sein de l’UNESCO est
devenu plus important en novembre 2013, lorsqu’ils ont été élus au Conseil
exécutif en qualité de vice-président du groupe électoral I (groupe des Etats
d’Europe occidentale et autres (GEOA)). Le gouvernement néerlandais prend cette
responsabilité très à cœur, notamment en soutenant activement la réforme que la
Directrice générale Irina Bokova a engagée depuis 2010. Cette réforme est le
fruit de la mise en œuvre des cinq recommandations de l’évaluation externe
indépendante de l’UNESCO en 2010, que les Pays-Bas ont cofinancée.
Le but de cette évaluation consistait à déterminer
le chemin que l’UNESCO devait suivre pour renforcer son rôle au sein de l’architecture
des Nations unies. Cet examen critique était important pour le gouvernement néerlandais,
car c’est en relevant ses propres défis que l’UNESCO sera le plus à même
d’aider la communauté internationale à relever les défis mondiaux dans le domaine
de l’Education, de la Culture, des Sciences, de l’Information et de la
Communication. Cette ambition exigera des choix forts et une ferme volonté de
se concentrer sur les points forts de l’organisation. En tant que
Vice-Président du Conseil Exécutif, les Pays-Bas sont plus que jamais à
l’écoute des Etats membres pour élaborer ces points forts ensemble. Car
l’effrayante complexité des défis qui nous guettent ne sera pas maîtrisée tant
que nous ne mettons pas tout en œuvre pour libérer le potentiel de création et
de coopération que recèle encore l’esprit de l’homme.
Sunday, May 18, 2014
Aldous and Julian Huxley about progress, risks and human values
Many of us worry about the future. We wonder where the
combination of technological progress, economic growth and increasing scarcity
will lead us. So did two famous British brothers: the writer Aldous Huxley and
his brother Julian, evolutionary biologist. First Aldous depicted how the world
would derail in Brave New World (1932).
Then Julian started building a better world when he became the first Director-General
of UNESCO in 1946. What can we still learn from their writings today?
This understanding, control and enjoyment can be improved by sharing it between small and big communities of interest. To prioritize quality over quantity, the challenge is to understand, control and enjoy in a balanced way. This means, as Charles Eisenstein puts it, to stop playing and messing around with earth’s gifts like children do with their toys. I don’t know what Eisenstein exactly means when he says that we need to put earth’s gifts “to their purpose”, but I think we should engage the debate on what this purpose is and start elaborating on its consequences. Maybe gratitude, as a natural response to earth’s gifts, can indeed be a useful guideline.
Aldous Huxley: over-rationalized Brave New World
In Brave New
World, Aldous Huxley offers a
frightening vision of the future. He wrote it after the Industrial Revolution and
World War I had deeply changed the world, and imagined how far this
transformation would take human society. He imagined a future in which mankind,
thanks to Science and Reason, had finally managed to take control over the
world and itself.
This Brave New World came at the prize of humanity losing
its soul. The reader discovers a dehumanized world based on the principles of
Henry Ford’s assembly line: mass production, homogeneity, predictability and unlimited
consumption of disposable consumer goods to satisfy society’s material needs. The
“good” news seems that yesterday’s war torn world had been replaced by a stable
global society unified under a “World State”. But the sad news was that in this
global rationalized world there was no room for human dignity and desire for
diversity. Over-rationalization had taken its toll to a point where Big Brother
in George Orwell’s 1984 would have had
nothing left to watch because the human desire for innovation and self-realization
had completely dried up. You might think that it is not possible to dehumanize
a society to such an extent. In Brave New
World however even the best hidden bit of humanity was put to sleep by the official
state drug soma, that had been developed to eliminate the need of religion and
personal desire for anything outside the World State.
Julian Huxley: scientific humanism to secure human values
Although Aldous’s Brave
New World did not come true entirely, dehumanization nevertheless took its
terrible toll during World War II which prompted the creation of United Nations.
14 years after his brother published his novel, Julian Huxley became the first
Director General of United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO). His responsibility was to determine how UNESCO could
prevent another holocaust by preventing critical thinking from being put to
sleep again by propaganda. Julian understood that a peaceful society could not
be – like Brave New World – based on
purely rational arrangements, but had to be founded “upon
the intellectual and moral solidarity of mankind”.
To build this human solidarity, he had to avoid the skylla
and charybdis of “exaggerated individualism” and “the philosophy of Facism in
which the State is regarded as embodying the highest values”. To reconcile
these extremes, he wrote, UNESCO must focus on the progress of humanity with a method
he called “scientific evolutionary humanism”. The scientific experimental method
of trial and error, he believed, was the best method for “embarking man upon
new possibilities”. His reliance on science was so strong that at some point his
thoughts strangely echoed the Nazi philosophy: “in the not very remote future
the problem of improving the average quality of human beings is likely to
become urgent; and this can only be accomplished by applying the findings of a
truly scientific eugenics.”
UNESCO’s emphasis on human values
His approach was nevertheless profoundly humanistic. Firstly
his desire for human progress was firmly based on the need to use science and “the
discussion method” to elaborate and establish human values on a global scale. A good example of this is UNESCO’s report on the philosophical principles of the
“rights of man”, which contributed to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Secondly, Julian Huxley was aware of the risks of uncontrolled and unquestioned
scientific progress. He therefore urged UNESCO to study the ethical
considerations of science and technology beyond purely economic considerations,
which the organization still does today.
The role of culture and art
Like his brother Aldous, Julian Huxley was afraid that exaggerated economic growth would cut society off from human values. He
emphasized the central role of culture and art for controlling this risk when he
writes about the consequences of industrialization: “In conjunction with laisser-faire and capitalist economic systems [industrialization] has not only
created a great deal of ugliness (much of it preventable), but has turned men
away from the consideration of beauty and art, and of their significance and
value in life – partly by its insistence on money values, partly by the
fascination exerted on the young mind by the products of mechanical invention”.
Art, he continues, is “the spearhead of [society’s] perception, the pioneer of
new modes of vision and expression. (…) For most people art alone can
effectively express the intangibles, and add the driving force of emotion to
the cold facts of information”. He was especially concerned by the declining
diversity of traditions and traditional knowledge, the pillars of society which
he observed “being undermined or wholly destroyed by the impact of Western
civilization, with its commercialism and individualism”.
Diversity and emotion as stronghold against dehumanization
What the dystopia Brave
New World and the utopia in Julian Huxley’s philosophy for UNESCO both
emphasize is the human desire for diversity as stronghold against
dehumanization and alienation. Julian’s plea for a global “pool” of traditions,
ideas and knowledge must not be seen as a standardization of contents itself,
but as the globalization of access to
contents like through the internet today. In the same way, his plea for a “world
government” was not meant to eliminate nations or communities of interests like
in the World State in Brave New World.
It was rather meant to encourage cross-pollination at a time where, Julian wrote,
“the scaffolding and the mechanisms for world unification have become
available”.
Reconnecting with our emotional and moral appreciation
The writings of both brothers leave us a legacy which
confronts us with the need to reconnect with our emotional and moral appreciation
of the world around us. It’s clear that both philosophy and art are crucial in
this endeavor as they stimulate the general process of enlarging the conceptual
and emotional capacity of mankind. Of course we all have our experience
of the world around us and of the future we are heading for, don’t we? But how well
are we equipped to interpret this experience? Are we doing okay? Are the
political and social structures we evolve in really fit to ensure our happiness
in the next few decades? And what is a good life after all?
To address this complexity we need art, philosophy and
social sciences in general. Art is needed because it can “express, as no other
medium can do, the spirit of a society, its ideas and purposes, its traditions
and its hopes.” Art also requires education: to support art production, but foremost to
appreciate art. Because “to expect to be moved and enriched by Giotto’s frescoes
in the Arena Chapel at Padua without some preparatory effort, is like expecting
a man with flabby untrained muscles to enjoy and to derive immediate benefit
from a twenty-five mile walk in the mountains”.
Conclusion: a balanced understanding, control and enjoyment
Julian Huxley's philosophy for UNESCO was never accepted by UNESCO's Member States. Member States considered that UNESCO's constitution was sufficient as a guideline, probably because they were not ready to accept some sort of Vatican for scientific humanism. As a consequence, Julian limited his term as a Director-General to two years. Nevertheless we can still draw inspiration from his philosophy and the principle on which he based it: “the world is potentially one, and human needs are the same in
every part of it – to understand it, to control it and to enjoy it”. This understanding, control and enjoyment can be improved by sharing it between small and big communities of interest. To prioritize quality over quantity, the challenge is to understand, control and enjoy in a balanced way. This means, as Charles Eisenstein puts it, to stop playing and messing around with earth’s gifts like children do with their toys. I don’t know what Eisenstein exactly means when he says that we need to put earth’s gifts “to their purpose”, but I think we should engage the debate on what this purpose is and start elaborating on its consequences. Maybe gratitude, as a natural response to earth’s gifts, can indeed be a useful guideline.
Based also on Van Helden, Andries (2001) Een halve eeuw UNESCO (Half a century of
UNESCO), Dutch National UNESCO Commission
Sunday, May 11, 2014
My twitter bio explained: The question of your life in five C’s
This is my twitter
bio:
“How to use human creativity, communication, cooperation, coordination
and some courage to achieve a more peaceful and sustainable world?”
Many times colleagues and
even communication specialists advised me to make it more professional, but I
just couldn’t change it. I nevertheless felt I had to do at least something. That something is my twitter
bio explained here below.
If you imagine your
life as an answer to a question, what would this question of your life be? It
would probably be a rather general question, like “what difference can I
make?”, “what is my passion?”, or “what can my family be proud of when they
think of me?”. Despite their generality, these questions strongly interfere
with the meaning of your life. Because if you consider your life as the answer
to a question, it becomes some sort of accomplishment of a mission. But what
can that mission be, besides being yourself?
There are probably
several missions to be accomplished and your challenge is to tune into them,
like you tune an old radio until the sound becomes clear and you like the
music. Part of this tuning process is also to find out who is assigning that mission to your life. Is it yourself? Your
family? History? Noone? For me, it doesn’t really matter where the mission
comes from, as long as I can agree with it and it makes me dance.
Something else you
need to figure out is: can your life be a bad answer? I don’t think so, but
nevertheless I feel more comfortable if I check once in a while if my life is
still okay enough as a ‘rolling answer’ to the question of my life. It’s a fun
exercise to do. It’s like opening all your life’s windows and airing it out
completely. After you’ve aired it all out you’ll find some interesting
questions and answers, free from the dust under which old habits and
preconceptions had hidden them.
The last time I did
this exercise I thought of things that are important to me, like living in
peace and in a sustainable way (not for me alone, but for everyone). So the
question of my life would necessarily have to do with achieving these goals.
Then I thought about my possible contribution to them. It seemed to me that
this contribution starts with consciousness and the Creativity that emanates from it, the first “C” of the question of
my life. Next step: what’s worth creativity if I keep it in my head? Answer:
not much. So the “C” of Communication
had to be key to my question too. This communication about creative ideas
should of course also be meaningful and effective. In other words, these ideas
should go beyond my computer screen and lead to Cooperation. Obviously, cooperation calls for Coordination, otherwise it might lead to anarchy.
These four “C’s”
seemed like a good basis for a good question of my life. But it still sounded
too hollow and easy, so I needed some further tuning. I wondered: how do you
get good ideas across and actually start the change you want? Well, mostly it
takes you to leave your comfort zone and show some Courage. This is the “C” I like the most, because it’s what often
is missing the most. Together, these five “C’s” compose the question of my
life: “How to use human creativity, communication, cooperation, coordination
and some courage to achieve a more peaceful and sustainable world?” Almost a
year after I chose this question it still resonates perfectly with me, like a
powerful melody that doesn’t wear off. So I continue to make sure my life will
be the answer to this question, or the dance to this melody.
Open-mindedness rose like a phoenix with Conchita Wurst
Already days before Conchita Wurst won the Eurovision Song Contest
last night, there were petitions
circulating for the singer to be removed from the competition. The reason: the
singer, a 25 year old man from Austria, performs dressed like a drag queen
wearing a dress and a sporting a beard. This combination of typical female and
male attributes on one single person apparently causes uneasiness.
Neighbors say we’re trouble
Well that time has passed
This uneasiness stems from a deeply rooted and specific
type of fear of “what’s different from us” (xenophobia). Conchita Wurst is
different from most of us because she doesn’t fit into the basic sexual
categories in terms of which we perceive and interpret our world. These
categories are: can we have babies together and perpetuate our DNA (category 1)
or not (category 2)? The combination of a beautiful female appearance with a beard
instantly blurs this basic dividing line thereby causing some uneasiness.
Don’t get me wrong: this doesn’t mean that we perceive
every person, young or old, as a potential partner for sex to start a family. These
are just basic perceptual categories that help our psyche quickly understand the
world around it, just like it spontaneously perceives trees and pianos as
things “my body cannot move” and books and laptops as “things my body can move”.
In other words: there is nothing wrong with or immoral about these perceptual reflexes,
nor with the uneasiness they cause when they don’t “work”.
The problems start when this uneasiness is translated
into homophobic laws. This is the case in some countries
in Eastern Europe, from which come 80
per cent of the autograph requests Conchita receives. These
laws are the official face of homophobia, which is just as gruesome as the unofficial
face of homophobia which I discovered in the French newspapers in April
last year. We will continue to see gruesome faces like this if laws like this
continue to violate the commitment
made by all members of the United Nations to promote and encourage “respect for human rights and for
fundamental freedoms for all without distinction as to race, sex, language, or
religion”.
Conchita confidently
says she has an elephant skin and that for her “everything
happens for a bigger reason”. Whatever its reason may be, her artistic victory
is also a victory of Europe’s open-mindedness. I wish she continues to “Rise Like a Phoenix” for LBGT rights, strengthened
by her positivism and 25 years of life experience she sang about in her winning
autobiographic song:
Waking in the rubble
Walking over glassNeighbors say we’re trouble
Well that time has passed
Thursday, May 8, 2014
World Social Science Report 2013: mankind as the blind spot of the sustainability agenda
Since the Dutch Nobel Prize winner Paul Crutzen marked
a new era by labeling it “Anthropocene”, it’s no longer nature but mankind who holds sway over
our planet. So to get a grip on the extreme changes our planet is undergoing we
should turn our focus from Mother Nature to her “unfaithful” and culture driven
human competitor. UNESCO’s five yearly World Social Science Report 2013 gives
an overview of how the social sciences can be of help.
Its diagnosis is
in line with earlier findings of the
Social Scientific Council of the Dutch Royal Academy of Sciences. In 2011 this
Council noted that “despite the prominent international position of the Dutch
Social Sciences, its recent findings are poorly used”. This leads, the
Council ads, to a lack of “insight in processes that determine the public
support and the behavioral response of the individual citizen”. This situation
will backfire now that we are confronted with climate change, which is the
theme of the World Social Science
Report 2013. Because climate change forces society more than ever to adapt
itself and therefore to find ways, via scientific research, to prepare the
individual behavior and society for this change.
The trend is that we need to become more aware of the complexity of the
climate change issue, and also of the fact that all stakeholders need to work
better together. To simplify: climate change is not a specific problem for the
climatologist, but a cross-cutting condition
that confronts society and citizens with fundamental choices. The trend however
is also that we don’t really address these choices. We prefer to invest in
technological “solutions” that leave the core of the problem untouched. For
example we try to reduce CO2 emissions by setting up an emission trading
scheme, or by burning biomass instead of coal. But in the meantime we’re still
following the wrong recipe: a man made and perpetuated unsustainable
development model that is deeply rooted in certain ideas about what progress
is. One of these ideas is that progress is measured by the gross domestic
product of a country, even if this product has (very) harmful social or
ecological consequences. A good alternative for this is the Inclusive Wealth Index, that doesn’t have
this blind spot.
The added value
of social sciences is that they can help policy makers and scientists to better
identify unsustainable development models. Useful questions for research in
this regard are for example where and how such models manifest itself in
individual or collective behavior. Once these models become “visible” in
behavior patterns, the policy maker can start designing ways to influence these
patterns to make them more sustainable. Example: a lot of research in social
sciences concentrates on high-frequency & low-impact behavior (refusing
plastic bags in the supermarket). Good policy however might benefit more from
research focusing on low-frequency &
high-impact behavior, like buying a car or insulating your home. Because
these forms of behavior make unsustainability visible on a more significant
scale, thus offering interesting opportunities for policy makers.
The challenge
is to find out next how these opportunities can be used to actually influence
behavior. Because although there is a lot of knowledge available about the
relation between human behavior and climate change, we lack knowledge about how
this behavior can be changed. Without
this specific knowledge we will not be able to shift individuals and societies
to the new sustainable world. An example: research shows that it is
counterproductive to inform citizens about the negative consequences of certain
frequent behavior (heavy water consumption). Why? Because during the evolution
human beings became imitators to increase their chances of survival as members
of the herd. Once this fact is established, policy can be adapted in such a way
that it does not go against but
rather with the human nature of
imitator. One way to do this is to print a happy or unhappy face on water and
energy bills, indicating how economical you are in comparison to your neighbors.
Success is guaranteed, with thanks to the social sciences.
These little tricks are a good start, but will not be
sufficient for a fast and more fundamental transformation of society. Such a
transformation requires that the sustainability issue be analyzed in a broader
and more integrated way. Take for instance the following key question: how can
people be motivated to move from polluting infrastructures and habits like the
car and the habit of systematically using it to alternative and less polluting infrastructures
systems and habits? To find out, social sciences (from economics, law and
political sciences to urbanism, geography and psychology) will first have to leave their tunnels and
link their research themes to the cross-cutting theme of climate change.
Example: if a legal specialist limits himself to traditional legal issues, this
will hamper the development of a legal perspective on climate change and
consequently also the debate about it. Secondly,
there are many potential synergies with natural sciences that deserve attention
from researchers. Think for instance of the geopolitical aspects of
biodiversity research, because of the value of CO2 absorbing forests in climate negotiations. Or think of seabed research, because of the
pharmaceutical resources and fossil fuels it contains. Thirdly, inter-disciplinarity will not happen without institutional
reforms. Because traditional research and promotion practices keep many
research areas closed for other research themes. And the practice of project related
financing often favors mono-disciplinary research. Fourthly, the effect of sustainability research is often limited
because its findings do not reach policy makers and the right audience, or not
in the right form. This situation could improve if research institutes use
media and communication experts more systematically. These experts can provide
the missing “translation” from research to policy, for example by confronting
policy makers more often with certain research findings. Finally, we could be more efficient in forecasting (un)sustainable
developments if we don’t generate our forecasts by extrapolating existing
datasets to the future (like the IPCC Assessment Report, the OECD Environmental
Outlook, etc.). Because if Henry T. Ford had forecasted on the basis of
available statistics what his future clients would ask for, the outcome would
have been: “a faster horse”. Instead the combustion engine and the automobile
quickly revolutionized the world, driven by the carbon intensive
infrastructures and habits associated with them.
Although we would not have been able to foresee the
automobile and the Arab Spring transforming societies, Riel Miller of UNESCO
argues that we can strengthen our
capacity to anticipate the future. To do this, he explains, we should not
limit ourselves to approaching the future’s uncertainty with the current
statistical and deterministic tools and methods. Instead, we should use this
uncertainty as a source of inspiration
to open up our thinking about the future with concepts like discontinuity,
openness, globalization and big data. These concepts help to open our view of
the future, first by identifying the anticipatory assumptions underlying our
thinking and then by suspending them. Miller puts this in practice by inviting policy
makers, scientists and other stakeholders around a table with regard to a
relevant theme. He then asks them on the basis of which implicit ideas about
the future they think and act today. This exercise exposes all kinds of causal
assumptions that the participants quickly learn to recognize as limited.
Finally they can help each other to correct these assumptions by integrating
new and unexpected insights, thereby enabling themselves to improve their
forecasts. In a similar way, social scientists can help society to reveal the
assumptions of individual and collective thinking and behavior. This knowledge
is needed “to find ways to embrace the wonder of unknowability [and not remain]
stubbornly insistent on taking an exclusively probabilistic and arrogantly
colonizing view of the future”.
My comments
- Many social
sciences are seen as “soft” in the
sense that they deal with matters
that seem to lack any serious, economical relevance (history, psychological
phenomena, primitive societies, etc.). Their (economical) relevance would become more visible if we would involve historians, psychologists and
ethnologists more in the study of complex issues like climate change. We could
start with ethicists, whose sharp analyses of responsibilities are anxiously
kept outside the doors of the political climate debate.
- The social sciences often feel undervalued as just a sort of interface tasked to translate findings of natural sciences into societal consequences. It is however too negative to suppose that the social sciences lose their “independence” by devoting themselves to a better dialogue between producers and users of knowledge (e.g. science and politics). On the contrary, as sciences of society in their own right they are best equipped to determine how societies organize themselves and consequently which scientific knowledge is most useful for that society. These analyses of usefulness are not a threat but an opportunity for the social sciences as they can show how broad and complete their understanding of society is. So they shouldn’t be afraid to help take away the criticism of policy makers that science is a source of “pieces of information” of which it is rarely clear “what should be done with it”.
- The elephants in the room are barely mentioned: demographic growth (in 2013 even China slightly loosened its one child policy) and religion. Religious engineering could be a promising research topic, as it could help to make the Arab world – despite its oil interests –more interested in sustainability issues. More generally, we could use knowledge about how religion works, and probably also about religion as an ally or communication channel, if we wish to prepare the international community for the 5th recommendation of the Post 2015 High Level Panel: “[establish] a new spirit of solidarity [based on] a common understanding of our shared humanity, underpinning mutual respect and mutual benefit in a shrinking world”.
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