A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
This article explores the relationship between design and research, and design and scholarship. It argues that merging design and research is untenable since each activity embodies a different epistemological perspective and set of values. More importantly, overtly integrating design and research diminishes the most important aspects of each activity. Instead, designers should characterize their work, and the knowledge that it uses and produces, as an intellectually separate but complementary counterpart to research. In doing so, designers take the first step toward developing a discipline-dependent scholarship whereby the discipline itself determines what constitutes knowledge and consequently what qualifies as scholarship.
This article explores the relationship between design and research, and design and scholarship. It argues that merging design and research is untenable since each activity embodies a different epistemological perspective and set of values. More importantly, overtly integrating design and research diminishes the most important aspects of each activity. Instead, designers should characterize their work, and the knowledge that it uses and produces, as an intellectually separate but complementary counterpart to research. In doing so, designers take the first step toward developing a discipline-dependent scholarship whereby the discipline itself determines what constitutes knowledge and consequently what qualifies as scholarship.
Toward a Discipline-Dependent Scholarship
Powers, Matt (author)
Journal of Architectural Education ; 61 ; 15-18
2007-09-01
4 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
Unknown
Toward a Discipline-Dependent Scholarship
British Library Online Contents | 2007
|Toward a Discipline-Dependent Scholarship
Online Contents | 2007
|British Library Online Contents | 1995
British Library Online Contents | 1997