p23: Learning From The Future: Module 1 - Page 22
p23: Learning From The Future: Module 1 - Page 22
p23: Learning From The Future: Module 1 - Page 22
Lynn Elen Burton once said “there are no facts in the future” and it is certainly ambitious to
try to learn as much about the future, from the future, as we have historically attempted to do
by extrapolating observable trends from the past. However, as futures studies have gained in
popularity over relatively recent years, that is precisely what has tended to happen.
Visualisation of where we may be going, rather than being based on predicted extensions of
where we’ve just been (historically, the dominant approach), now tend to look for new trends
and new paradigms that represent more than just a simple extension of current practice. This
is the philosophy that has given rise to the popular ‘3 Ps and a W’ approach.
The 3 Ps represent our attempts to imagine possible, probable, and preferable future
scenarios, which is in itself an interesting approach. It recognises two key elements straight
away—first that there are likely to be multiple possible outcomes related to the future of any
aspect of civilisation—employment, personal relationships, health, technology, transport etc.
—and, second, that some form of analysis can be applied to prioritise the likelihood of each
of these outcomes actually resulting. More importantly, however, the inclusion of ‘preferable’
indicates a belief that, at least to some extent, humankind
is capable of choice, of influencing the priorities attached to each possible outcome in order
that a more desirable future may be realised. Once the ‘preferable’ future has thus been
identified, the inclusion of a ‘W’ element is all but automatic.
Module 1 - Page 22‘W’ stands for ‘wild card’, or an event of such unpredictability, and of such
major significance, that the generally accepted equilibrium of world affairs is upset to the
point where many of its contributing principles are negated. In recent times, many have
argued that 9/11 was such a wild card event. Yes, we always have had, and always will have,
random acts of violence resulting from passionately held beliefs around certain philosophies
and value systems but, until 2001, these acts were generally aimed at drawing attention to ‘the
cause’ or generating minor irritation to authority figures. After 9/11, and subsequent attacks in
both America and elsewhere, perhaps the single most important outcome has been a new
understanding amongst Western populations of
just how fragile and insecure their daily existence actually is. In effect, the biggest victim of
9/11 could well have been smug complacency, as witness the extraordinary subsequent
expansion of the personal security industry.
What then might the next ‘wild card’ be? By their very nature, wild cards are extraordinarily
difficult to predict, and the more outrageous they seem in their imagining, the more influential
they well be in retrospect. True ‘wild cards’ do not change paradigms of thought, they destroy
paradigms of thought. Having said that, wild card identification is the subject of our first two
hour workshop, and we will at that time attempt to generate a range of realistic possibilities.
This of course has been done before—any Sunday newspaper worth its salt will in all
probability begin each New Year with a list of confident predictions, and most of the time we
(quite correctly) read them and laugh. However, despite the quite tragic errors of judgement
revealed in reading 1.4, we should not be deterred from continued thought and action on the
futures prediction front. Perhaps if we think long enough, hard enough, and carefully enough,
we may yet extend this logic into some method for successful prediction of lottery numbers !
At the end of this exercise, you should clearly be able to see something of the
extent to which any two individuals are likely to differ in their approach to
thinking about the past and the present—in our view, this automatically
translates into a parallel difference in ways of thinking about the future.
Learning task 1.6—Words
Consider the meaning of the words futures, change, progress What do they have in common?
What are some common sayings about the future? Record them in your diary.
As you progress through the course, consider their worth.
If, for example, we were attempting to measure a business firm’s reputation and image, we
might:
• read the firm’s own publicity, and visit its website, to analyse the nature of claims made
Module 1 - Page 25Reading 1.5 by Meyer establishes the all but universal practice of setting academic
investigation within a clearly delineated ‘frame’, and questions why this need be the case.
Clearly the impact of perspective would inevitably affect the characteristics of camel chosen
by the commentator for investigation, evaluation, and eventual description. And this is what
has traditionally occurred during the practice of scientific investigation, both simplified and
constrained by what Morgan Meyer calls ‘framing’.
Somewhat crudely, ‘if it looks like a camel, sounds like a camel, and smells like a camel—
then, it probably is a camel !’, and so it is with the idea of transdisciplinarity. The camel
analogy is continued as we imagine what would be described, to the ubiquitous visitor from
outer space, if the concept of ‘camel’ was to be described by:
-another camel.
Clearly the impact of perspective would inevitably affect the characteristics of camel chosen
by the commentator for investigation, evaluation, and eventual description. And this is what
has traditionally occurred during the practice of scientific investigation, both simplified and
constrained by what Morgan Meyer calls ‘framing’.
Having said all of that, the reader is left with a sense that Meyer primarily advocates a
transdisciplinarity approach as a vehicle to minimise the need for framing, but that he still
sees the idealised target outcome as the isolation of a single and universal ‘truth’. This is
indicative of the traditional natural sciences approach referred to earlier, an approach which is
by no means universally embraced by social scientists.
This is a fairly complex and relatively dense reading, which nevertheless has much of value to
offer the dedicated reader—not least amongst which is the realisation that the existence of
multiple versions of truth demands the application of a high level of multi-modal thinking if
the most effective adaptation to dominant influences is to be effected. Only in this way can
we hope to challenge what Max-Neef describes as our current status of ‘knowing very much
but understanding very little’. So how do we do this?
The global perspective
So what happens when we try to reconcile the two powerful perspectives of positivism and
interpretivism, when we propose that the future will indeed be comprised of a series of
interlinked ‘truths’, and that each of these truths will exhibit significant variation when
viewed from multiple vantage points? One already apparent example of this reconciliation is
discussed below.
The ‘truth’ in question is the proposition that the philosophies, form, structure, and activities
of for-profit business have, for the past 20 years or so, been undergoing the most radical sea
change since the Industrial Revolution. In saying this, we are happy for the ‘truth’ of this
statement to be debated, for we are no more entitled than anyone else to claim that we have
unbridled access to that elusive entity. However, we do feel we are on fairly safe ground
when we suggest that ‘business is currently going through unprecedented change’. How do
we know this?
Business students at this and other universities will tell of the shift from manufacturing to
service industries; political science students will speak of the demise of collectivist systems of
governance and the emergence of new global power bases; sociologists will note the change
role of ‘women in work’, and the growing influence of workplace diversity; and electronics
engineers will comment on the rapid replacement of people by machines. Each of these
components of a trans-disciplinary approach will select an entirely different
aspect of for-profit business to comment on—and each will agree that the content of their
observations is dominated by the scope and scale of observable change.
So what about the process of reconciliation—how do we bring together all of these
observations into a coherent summary of what has happened, and therefore (in the absence of
any more creative imagining), what might reasonably be expected to continue happening? Let
us give three possible responses to that question (there are of course more than just these
three).
•The positive response: all of these changes, taken together, constitute ‘globalisation’. This is
a uniformly beneficial development that will contribute to international stability through more
equitable distribution of the benefits of growth.
•The negative response: all of these changes, taken together, constitute the biggest threat there
has ever been to the planet’s continued existence. Current industrial changes will exacerbate
international tension by further enriching the already wealthy at the expense of the already
poor, while simultaneously destroying the environment that both rich and poor rely upon.
•The pragmatic approach (to paraphrase Bill Clinton): we can have economic growth or
environmental purity. But we do have to choose!
Peter Newell’s reading 1.7 provides a thorough expansion of this discussion. Newell attempts
to bridge the divide between globalisation and environmental integrity through the use of both
positive suggestion—advocacy of triple bottom line evaluation and reporting—and by the
somewhat terrifying warning of ‘pollution havens’. Especially terrifying from an Australian
viewpoint, as that country’s vast tracts of underpopulated territory would seem to offer
significant possibilities for intending polluters.
In the end, Newell’s article is no more than one person’s interpretation of a possible future for
a single (though vitally important) element of what these futures hold. However, if students of
this course are able to construct similar models of interpretation and analysis, in relation to
topics that are salient
for them, we believe that the primary ambition of this course will have been satisfied.
p29: Summary
In this first module, we have set out to establish an appropriate foundation for the future study
of futures. In this respect, we believe that the main point for students to absorb is the linear
proposition that the future is eventually going to arrive for all of us; that this will happen
whether we plan for it or not; that many of our attempts to future plan will undoubtedly fail;
but, those who accept the challenges of futures planning will be much better paced than others
to cope with whatever version of the future turns out to be the ‘real’ one.
Having said that, here are some key points, offered in an attempt to simplify what is a
relatively complex concept:
•Continued and accelerating change in all aspects of our lives is almost certainly inevitable.
•Each individual may consciously select his or her own level of engagement with thinking
about (or not thinking about) the future.
Reading 1.7 by Newell offers a thorough discussion of the interface between globalisation and
environmentalism.
Module 1 - Page 29• Each individual will adopt his or her own personal framework of
observation when thinking about the future, emphasising those characteristics of tomorrow’s
world that are especially relevant to that individual.
•Much of what is anticipated to occur in the future may never actually eventuate; and much of
what actually eventuates will not have been widely predicted.
•The greater the level of accuracy in individual predictions, the better equipped that individual
will be for future success.