Good on George Monbiot for deflating the celebrity bubble that has grown around Steven Pinker's work.
'Rather than using primary sources, Pinker draws on anecdote,
cherry-picking and discredited talking points developed by
anti-environmental thinktanks.Take, for example, Pinker’s claims about
the landmark Limits to Growth report,
published in 1972. It’s a favourite target of those who seek to dismiss
environmental problems. He suggests it projected that aluminium,
copper, chromium, gold, nickel, tin, tungsten and zinc would be
exhausted by 1992. It is hard to see how anyone who had read the report
could form this impression. The figures it uses for illustrative
purposes have been transformed by some critics into projections.
Its actual prediction is that “the great majority of the currently
important non-renewable resources will be extremely costly 100 years
from now”. It would be perfectly reasonable to take issue with this
claim. It is not reasonable to recycle, then attack, a widely circulated
myth about the report. That’s called the straw man fallacy. It is contrary to the principles of reason that Pinker claims to champion.'
Ray Ison, Professor in Systems at the UK Open University since 1994, is a member of the Applied Systems Thinking in Practice Group. From 2008-15 he also developed and ran the Systemic Governance Research Program at Monash University, Melbourne. In this blog he reflects on contemporary issues from a systemic perspective.
Thursday, March 08, 2018
Wednesday, March 07, 2018
More on the systemic failings of universities/H.E.
From a despondent Peter Scott in an article today called: 'Don’t let this university wrecking government masquerade as reformers'
'The fees and funding system in England is certainly bust.'
' English higher education is too expensive. It is the most expensive public system of higher education in the world (including the US).'
'The fees and funding system in England is certainly bust.'
' English higher education is too expensive. It is the most expensive public system of higher education in the world (including the US).'
Tuesday, March 06, 2018
Duality, Dualism, Duelling and Brexit
Ed Straw and I have had an essay published on Open Democracy which explores the systemic implications of the current 'Brexit Mess' (in the sense that Russ Ackoff referred to messes). The article is an elaboration of a letter sent to Jeremy Corbyn, Keir Starmer and Emily Thornberry.
Paul Mason provides a systemic account of 'fake news'
British commentator and radio personality Paul Mason uses a form of modified system dynamics modelling to analyse and explain the systemic implications and functioning of 'fake news'
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