Title: PowerPoint Presentation - Management Development Program
1You walk into a room and find Karen and Joe dead.
The only evidence at the scene is some broken
glass and a puddle of water. How did Karen and
Joe die?
2Part I Why LS 1?
3Dr. Ann Harper Fender
Mary Wollstonecraft, A Vindication of the Rights
of Women
4This course was not awful like I was
warned. 2003 LS 1 Student
5LS 1 was my favorite course. I had both a fun
and enlightening time in LS 1. LS 1 made me
much more aware of the world around me and helped
me engage in critical thinking.
2003 LS 1 Students
6My writings have virtues that cannot be
disentangled from the faults ... there is a way
of being wrong which is also sometimes
necessarily right. Edward Abbey, 1967
7THINK!
8THINK!
Also think about HOW you think
9The Importance of Fundamentals
?
10Part II - Ways of Knowing (Fixing Belief)
- Induction an argument from a random sample to a
population - Deduction an argument from a population to a
random sample
11Ah, Chocolate
12More Chocolate
13And Even More Chocolate
14Conclusion
15At Mrs. Londons
16But Then Arlene Lesher Ruined It
17Charles Sanders Peirce Fixing Belief
18Charles Sanders Peirce Fixing Belief
- Beliefs (cling to) and Doubts (try to eliminate)
- Beliefs ? Actions
- Irritation of Doubt ? Inquiry
- Methods of Fixing Belief
- Tenacity
- Authority
- a priori Agreeable to Reason / Induction
- Science
- Science ? Reals and Truth (only way to settle
opinion) - All investigators will eventually converge on the
same truth in the infinite long run
19Some Examples From My Childhood
- Tenacity
- Authority
- a priori Reason
- Science
20Peirce Thinks We Must Choose Science
- Other three methods have some merits
- But Peirce thinks we should want opinions to
coincide with facts therefore we must ultimately
choose science - If a person seeks to avoid the truth, s/he is in
a sorry state of mind indeed. -
21Other Thoughts on Fixing Belief Science
- Charles Darwin Painstaking observation leads to
knowing - Thomas Kuhn Normal science is based upon past
scientific achievements and shared paradigms
(common sets of assumptions) there is a
universal scientific language as well as a
cumulative nature to knowing - Stephen Jay Gould Knowledge is constantly
changing Facts are always reassessed,
reinterpreted, reconfigured, etc. - Frank Conroy Understanding is both a conscious
and unconscious process can take years and is
often triggered by seemingly unrelated events - Benjamin Whorf Edward Sapir Culture and
language shape each other and structure the way
we perceive the world thus there isnt a single
reality -
22Some Questions to Think About
- Are Reals really independent of opinion?
- Can all questions be answered with science?
-
23Part III Problem Analysis and Decision Making 101
24The Rational Decision Making Process
Define/Diagnose The Problem orIssue
Develop Alternative Solutions
Evaluate Alternatives
Choose Best Alternative and Implement It
25Are Decision Making (Problem Analysis and
Solving) Processes Completely Rational?
Some recent examples
- Mate Choice College Choice
- 800 Classes Alarm Clocks
- Traffic Patterns The Energy Bill
- 9/11 Response
26Joshs Mate Choice Discussion
27800 Classes
?
28Mohan Stuck in Traffic in Boston
299/11
30Problem Analysis and Problem Solving Perils
- Dont have complete information
- Focus on symptoms not the core problem or issue
- Differences in underlying assumptions and beliefs
- There isnt a problem or issue, rather there are
many interrelated problems and issues
31As a Result
- Decision making is not a rational process. Too
many issues, too many choices, not enough time,
other resource limitations, cognitive
limitations, etc. Thus, our rationality is
bounded. - These limitations lead to satisficing behavior as
opposed to maximizing behavior (college choice,
job choice, mate choice?) - S/he who defines the problem or issue has just as
much, if not more, power than s/he who solves it!
(energy issue, Iraq, academic rigor)
32Decision Making Problems in Groups
- Group Polarization Groups tend to make more
extreme decisions individuals in group not as
accountable
Glenbrook High Powder Puff Hazing
33Decision Making Problems in Groups
- Groupthink Team cohesiveness leads members to
strive for unanimity rather than realistically
appraise alternative courses of action (Space
Shuttle disasters, Iraq?)
- Group is highly cohesive
- Group faces external threat
- Group is isolated from outsiders
- Self-censorship of dissenting ideas
- Excessive negative stereotyping
- Unquestioned morality
34Decision Making Problems in Groups
- Escalation of Commitment Self-justification,
gamblers fallacy, perceptual blinders, closing
costs, etc., lead people to continue down a path
of failure (Relationships, Vietnam, Building the
Concorde)
35Garbage Can Model of Decision Making
Issues
Feelings
Its only rational that decision making processes
are not rational! BUT, understanding the
pitfalls leads us closer to rationality
Solutions
Problems
Luck
Participants
36Show up on time!Be prepared to think and
debate.Dont be scared of the irritation of
doubt and be open to changing your beliefs.
Parting Shots