Theory of Sustainability
Lecture 8 - The Art of Longterm Thinking
Lecture 8 - The Art of Longterm Thinking
Set of flashcards Details
Flashcards | 12 |
---|---|
Language | English |
Category | Social |
Level | University |
Created / Updated | 17.01.2022 / 17.01.2022 |
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3 Key Normative Aspects of Sustainability
1. Rawls (Theory of Justice): addresses the problem of distributive justice (the socially just distribution of goods in a society)
2. Sen/Nussbaum (Capacity approach): Capabilities are the real freedoms that people have to achieve their potential doings and beings (e.g., HDI)
3. Hans Jonas (Responsibility for the future): We must ensure that the effects of our actions do not destroy future means to protect the future humanity’s autonomy, dignity, integrity and vulnerability.
5 Key Deficits in Scientific Discussions
- dealing with uncertainty and ignorance
- including practical knowledge into decision making
- grasping long term effects
- meeting a claim of a holistic perspective
- dealing with complexity
What is Utilitarianism?
Utilitarian: moral value of an action is measured by its contribution to increase welfare, utility, happiness etc.
Underlying Principle: Consequentialism, i.e. those alternatives are best, whose consequences are most desirable.
What is a rational decision? What is a gut-feeling?
rational = one is able to give good reasons for his/her decision
while gut feelings are intuitive decisions / where the intellect is not involved
Describe Science-Based Politics.
Science-based politics ideally justifies its decisions and measures without gaps
A good policy is applied science
Policy advice is done by following “recipes” that are applied mechanically
Describe an intuitive concept of politics.
Good politicians act instinctively and intuitively – following their gut feelings
Politics is improvisation
A good politician needs both: scientific reasoning and intuition
What is judgment?
Kant "Critique of Pure Reason": judgment is...distinguishing whether this / that does or does not stand under a given rule
ability of a person
enables the person to bridge between a specific situation and general aspects/rules
practical knowledge: necessary for decision making, for advising
3 Features
1. Bottom-up Approach: Example of diagnosis: the doctors understands medical ailments and the doctor subsumes the symptoms under a certain disease.
(vs. Top-down Approach: a therapist who applies general rules to heal a patient)
2. Heuristic: Judgement uses heuristics – i.e., rules and bridging principles that provide orientation when searching. When judging, a human presumes that the world is structured in a comprehensible way. That is, why it makes sense to search for rules and laws.
3. One needs feelings, but feelings are capable of both truth and error. Therefore we must abstract from our inclinations, interests and personal sentiments (Aristotle) AND it is helpful to judge from the point of view of an impartial observer (common sense).
Conditions for Good Judgment (vs. relying on gut feelings)
Refrain from personal inclinations, interests and ideology
Objectiveness: Understand and act for the sake of the concern
Openness for dialogue: Try to understand others
Scientific Knowledge vs. Practical Knowledge and the power of judgment
Scientific Knowledge
Well-defined, abstract question
Solution / demonstrable
Logical method / coherence
Theory, Model, facts (certain/precise)
Can be taught/learnt in books
non-personal
Practical Knowledge/Judgment
- Concrete/diffuse situations
- Decisions / non demonstrable
- Heuristic method
- Gaps in argumentation
- Narratives / examples / reality / knowhow
- Uncertain / imprecise
- Not teachable / has to be exercised / Personal
Power of Judgment
- Distinguish important from irrelevant
- Make fair evaluations
- Make good decisions
Sustainability and time: notion of justice in an intertemporal space
Time is central in analysis
Long time horizon for decisions
Therefore, judgment is needed to make good decisions/find the right time to act.
What are the 3 notions of time?
1. Chronos: Homogeneous concept of time / time bar / basis of scientific analysis
2. Kairos: Relevant for practical action and decision-making, i.e., "right time to act"
3. Inherent time, inherent dynamics: Natural course of things (lifespan/ typical duration of a process) creates temporal boundary conditions for action
Aim- make inherent time visible and find the kairos!
Outline for Sustainable Heuristics
1. Identify relevant stocks/resource
- gather previous knowledge / check their importance
2. Sketch the inherent time of stocks
- gather previous knowledge / check their importance
3. Integrate dynamics of stocks to an overall picture and search for windows of opportunity
- keep as simple as possible / complex as necessary
- Judgement of analyst is essential
What are stocks?
2 Types of Stocks: material stocks / immaterial stocks and persistent institutions (a set of material elements that is persistent, where persistency is measured against a time scale of observation / chronos)
Characteristics:
Stock dynamics is typically non-static, but inertial – change takes time
Long time spans for built-up or change of whole system
Complex dynamics
Example: Construction of Traffic Infrastructure
- planning and building: 5-15 years
- life expectancy: 20-30 years or more
Immaterial Stocks: immaterial factors change over time – but slowly (important for sustainability policies)
- knowledge / technologies
- lifestyles / cultures / traditions / preferences
- Institutions / regulatory frameworks
- Incentives
The Art of Longterm Thinking: Overview on Sustainability Heuristics
Key
- Political action needs judgment
- Judgment uses heuristics
- Sustainability needs time
Stocks relates to time: Material stocks and immaterial stocks/persistent instutitons
Heuristics consists of bridging principles to
1. identify relevant stocks
2. Sketch their inherent time
3. Integrate to overall picture and identify kairos