- Good evening to chairperson, ladies and gentlemen.
- The topic of our debate is that design works speak louder than words.
- And we the affirmative team do agree with this statement and one of your speakers said that babies know words from the early age, right?
- But, they also learn how to draw and they also learn how to play with their toys.
- Is it toys is made from words or design?
- Of course from design, right?
- And one more thing you guys said that words can make more people understand about certain things.
- But I do agree with myself because I know people do not like to talk a lot because it just waste their time to explain this, explain that, explain one by one and but still some people can't understand what they want to tell, okay?
- Okay, because for me, what someone does is more important than what someone says. Okay, for example, if I say I love you, but with this sorrow face - I love you, did you think that person will trust you and hit you back with I love you too? No, I don't think so that's why you have to prove it and you have to show them your words - I love you is meaning, meaningful.
- I know sometimes people can't understand based on what they see. Okay, for example, if I show them my drawing, okay and I tell them this is my drawing and this is my feeling and this is about my mood today. Sometimes, people can't understand but you know, rather than talking a lot and explain one by one, I think by showing them my drawing, my life can get more easier than talking and talking until the end of my life.
- Even though we might not know what it means exactly but I guess even though we see from the design work like from we see the structures, the objects, the colors, the tones, of course, obviously we can get what they want to tell us.
- So, there is no need to talk and talk because by design people can get what we want to tell them. They can understand like I talk to you, you can understand, you can get what I want to talk.
- And here I want to tell you the main issue is, if you want to sell something and you have to define it and if you want to define it, you have to show them the prove. And the prove is your design work not your words. If you meet your client, you have to show them your design work not your words because at first people will trust you but without your design work, people cant trust you after that. That is the important of design work.
- Because there is a creative ways to convey a message to the other people and by using design we can deliver our message.
- So, ladies and gentlemen, as a conclusion, we do agree with this statement that design works speak louder that words and that's it.
- Thank you.
Wednesday, 16 May 2012
Debate Transcript (15th May 2012)
Wednesday, 4 April 2012
Critique Challenge
Based on my understanding of this part (emotivism) and based on the conclusion made by our group discussion, the view of judgement is depends on expressions of mine or writer’s feelings. For me, it does not depends on statement of fact but mostly it depends on our mood on that day whether we are in a good mood or otherwise. Let say, I am in a good mood today so I will give a judgement of this video based on my happy expressions. According to the emotivist, when we say “You should not do like that to your friend,” we are not expressing any fact beyond that stated by “You treat your friend so badly.” It is however, as if we had stated this fact with a special tone, for in saying that something is wrong, we are expressing our feelings of disapproval toward it. If someone says to me, “This is good,” and unfortunately I am not in mood so it would be appropriate for me to respond by saying, “But I do not like it as well so what led you to believe that I did?” . So basically, it depends on my mood or my own expressions to give a judgement.
Right now, I am in a very good mood so what can I conclude from this video here is the audience will enjoyed watching this video. Why I said like that? It is because of the way of the telling is funny and nice. The audience glad to watch this video until the ending part happily because this video has a high value of humour. In my opinion, the audience especially the youth between 12 and 21 years of age will be able to laugh louder even though they do not understand the concept of the story. In my emotivisim opinion, I will definitely like this video because the storyline is fun and when we are re-watching this video, we still can laugh out loud without feeling bored. The audience will be able to recognize and understand the moral values of the story voluntarily. Here, I would like to include the moral values of the story which is we cannot judge someone by looking at his/her physical only without knowing him/her well. Back to basic, after watching this video, the audience should be able to develop an appreciation of beauty without looking at their physical only with no doubt. I would like to say that everybody loves to see or watch something attractive in their life. So, this is similar to what I was trying to say. Even though the storyline of this video is a little bit messy, but still the audience loved to watch this video until the ending part of the video because of the model in the video. In addition, for me, the audience should be able to capture the message of this story and for sure the message in this video should be clear and easier to understand.
Based on criterion reference assessment, I will set the criteria based on the model in this video. Normally, when people see somebody with a nice hair or beautiful face, they will definitely say, “You are beautiful in your way.” So, the first criteria is the model with a good looking, the taller one and the style of his/her dressup. In this case, the model in this video already got the criterion given so totally, I think I like this video. But, even though I give a judgement based on emotivism, I think I can make a judgement better by using relativism.
Tuesday, 13 March 2012
Emotional Design - Donald A. Norman
Sunday, 4 March 2012
On The Aesthetic Education of Man
The Letters on Aesthetic Education offer an interpretation of the development of the individual and the parallel development of Western civilization. These interpretations focus on the conditions that allow for mental health in a human individual and society and especially demonstrate the crucial role of artistic experience in healthy human development. Friedrich Schiller was influenced by his contemporary Immanuel Kant and goes on to explore the implications that emerge from our understanding of the sublime in relation to culture, society and our own edification. His 'letters' are insightful of a man who wants his readers to make a difference to the ennoblement of life rather than descend to the easy pursuit of the superficialities that are just as obvious in our lives today. Basically, Schiller took Kantian idealism and crossed it with a popular format because they are written as "letters". Unlike Kant, you can actually read Schiller, since this book is only 140 pages long. The reason for this book is still relevant is that Kantian idealism underlay most popular manifestations of Romanticism but most people who consider themselves as "Romantics" literally have no idea what Kantian idealism means. Of course myself included. Thus, by reading this one 140 page book, you can kind of get a handle on the relationship and gain a better understanding of artists who are influenced by this time period.
On The Aesthetic Education Of Man is a philosophical enquiry into the source of art and beauty describing how art and beauty are related to human freedom. According to Schiller, freedom is attained when the sensual drive and rational drive are fully integrated and when the individual can allow both drives to be fully expressed, without being constrained by them. In the fourth letter, Schiller claims that if man is to attain the state of reason and still preserve his freedom, “this can be brought about through both these motive forces, inclination and duty, producing completely identical results in the world of phenomena; through the content of his volition remaining the same whatever the difference in form; that is to say, through impulse being sufficiently in harmony with reason to qualify as universal legislator”.
Schiller offers us On the Aesthetic Education of Man as an aesthetic object and with that places his work in a strange position. Yet, as much as Schiller would like us to perceive his work as an aesthetic object, we wouldn’t be justified in doing so. In the very last letter, Schiller undermines his own argument about the ‘innocence’ of the aesthetic object, reducing the aesthetic to notions of refinement and decorum thereby disclosing the illusory freedom it offers. Schiller assumed that beauty is an aesthetic unity of thought and feeling, of contemplation and sensation of reason and intuition of activity and passivity of form and matter. In Schiller’s philosophy, the state of true aesthetic freedom is achieved by the "play drive" which mediates between the "material drive" and the "formal drive" which is allowing both sides of human nature to be fully developed and unified.
Schiller’s focus on freedom in his definition of the aesthetic already hints at the tendency of his aesthetic to slip into the sublime insofar as freedom is typically associated with the sublime rather than with the beautiful object. According to this interpretation, Schiller was deeply affected by the consequences of the French Revolution and accepted Goethe’s belief that the poet ought to remain a stranger to his age, that art need not fulfil a moral function. Although Schiller claims that semblance is independent from truth and does not threaten it, he fails to dissociate the two completely. Thus, although Schiller would like us to believe that his only motive for making the aesthetic autonomous is to reveal its transcendental ground, we might ask whether his real motive might not be a certain disappointment.
In Schiller's aesthetic philosophy, human nature consists of two realms of being that which persists and that which changes. Schiller says that the unchanging self is not determined by time but that time is determined by the unchanging self. Every human being is a person who is situated in a particular situation. According to Schiller, aesthetic education can produce not only an increased level of awareness or receptivity to the world but can also produce an increased intensity in the determining activity of the intellect.
Schiller tries to identify the aesthetic as precisely as we saw, he cannot preserve its purity and self-sufficiency and keeps overstepping the boundary that is supposed to separate it from the realm of form and reason.