Description
Book Synopsis* Engages design students with the philosophical and ethical underpinnings of their discipline * Written in a clear accessible way suitable for the non-specialist * Builds a strong case for the reassessment of Modernist design ethics * Suitable for students of design, philosophy, ethics, modernism and related subjects.
Trade Review"This very readable and illuminating book is a must-have for designers and the students of design."
Oxford JournalTable of ContentsAcknowledgements
Introduction
1 What is Design?
1.1 Defining ‘Design’
1.2 Ontological Issues
1.3 Activity, Profession and Practice
1.4 The Rise of the Designer
2 The Design Process
2.1 The Challenges of Design
2.2 A Crisis of Confidence
2.3 The Epistemological Problem
2.4 Are Design Problems Ill-Defined?
2.5 Some Responses
2.6 Prestructures and Principles
3 Modernism
3.1 The Origins of Modernism
3.2 Reinterpretations and Linkages
3.3 The Failure of Modernism
4 Expression
4.1 The Meanings of Design
4.2 Expression and Eros
4.3 The Better Realization Argument
4.4 Illusion and Reality
4.5 An Objection
5 The Concept of Function
5.1 The Indeterminacy of Function
5.2 Intentionalist Theories of Artefact Function
5.3 Evolutionary Theories of Artefact Function
5.4 Objections to the Evolutionary Theory
5.5 Novelty, Design and the Epistemolocial Problem
6 Function, Form and Aesthetics
6.1 Can Form Follow Function?
6.2 Squaring Function and Aesthetic Value
6.3 Dependent Beauty
6.4 Functional Beauty
6.5 Good Taste in Design
6.6 Bad Taste
7 Ethics
7.1 Applied Ethics and Design
7.2 Consumerism, Needs and Wants
7.3 Is Need an Empty Concept?
7.4 Does Design Alter the Moral Landscape?
7.5 The Designer Stands Alone?
Epilogue: The Meaning of Modernism
Suggestions for Further Reading
Notes
References