Gordon Glegg wrote The Design of Design (long before the Brooks book of that title) — it’s one of those foundational (1969) classics with chapters on: 1. The design of the problem; 2. The design of the designer; 3. The design of design: the inventive; 4. The design of design: the artistic; 5. The design of design: the rational; 6. Safety margins.

(I think it was @glv who introduced it to us on twitter, years ago.)

https://mastodon.social/@RuthMalan/112486126305803493

I transcribed the bit about the floor covering heist and “sense of fitness of things” in Glegg’s lecture, for a section on integrity and cohesion.

Several pages here:
https://mastodon.social/@RuthMalan/112486126305803493

Which lead to: Design Designs. (Yes ontological design, and also Gabriel’s essay engaging with Brooks on conceptual integrity.)

It’s a thought provoking area … at a time when… executive fiat is taking us in ever more destructive directions…

Like… do we teach organizational survival skills or design leadership … in this era?? (Rhetorical! But it seems to be what more and more want from me.) The self-validating brotopia of SV execs is taking us faster to destruction… But they’re creating the kind of job pressure that augurs against … being … thoughtful… and responsible (and response-able)… ???

Oh! Haha, I seldom read the acknowledgements, but on a tip from @glv see Brooks crediting Glegg:

“Acknowledgments
I have borrowed my title from a work of a generation ago by Gordon Glegg, an ingenious mechanical designer, a charming person, and a spellbinding Cambridge lecturer. It was my privilege to lunch with him in 1975 and to catch some of his passion for design. His title perfectly captures what I am attempting, so I reuse it with gratitude and respect.”

@RuthMalan I'm pretty sure that's right. I had first heard of it in the preface to Brooks' book, but it took a recommendation from @michaelkeeling before I actually sought out a copy.
@glv oh right, it might be that we both arrived at it via @michaelkeeling !!
@glv looking at my twitter history as a better memory keeper than my brain, and yeah thank you @michaelkeeling :)
@RuthMalan @glv I'm always happy to share (and receive!) interesting book recommendations! Glegg's series is a good one.

@michaelkeeling i only have this one; others in the series you particularly like? My budget is groaning ;)

@glv

@RuthMalan @glv as someone who sometimes straddles the worlds of science and engineering, I felt The Development of Design spoke to me. I picked up The Selection of Design at a time when I was struggling with those very problems, but perhaps mileage may vary. The Science of Design is good, though so are other books on this perspective of design.
@RuthMalan @glv
If you are patient and a bit lucky you can score old library editions at a reduced price, which I just love. My copy of The Selection of Design is from the Glasgow College of Technology and was first checked out in 1973! It also came with this chit in a pocket, I guess for some kind of cataloging system.
@michaelkeeling @RuthMalan That’s how I got my copy of The Design of Design … it’s from Bucknell University, first checked out in 1980!

@glv @michaelkeeling

Mine too… Gulf Coast Community College … :)

Looking at how seldom these books were checked out…. But good job to all who rescued them :)

@RuthMalan @glv Whoa, that is so wild... as a kid I took swim lessons and attended art and science camps at the Gulf Coast Community College in the late-80s. 🤯 The second life of library books is so cool.

(I somehow missed this update and am only just now catching up.)