[SIGCIS-Members] Importance of history to practitioners

Murray Turoff murray.turoff at gmail.com
Thu Nov 17 10:09:07 PST 2016


If you want to understand the history of Computer Science or any science i
recommend:
The Design of Inquiring Systems: Basic Concepts of Systems and Organization
<https://www.amazon.com/Design-Inquiring-Systems-Concepts-Organization/dp/0465016081/ref=sr_1_39?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1479405652&sr=1-39&keywords=c.+west+churchman>Jan
1972
by Charles West Churchman
Hardcover
<https://www.amazon.com/Design-Inquiring-Systems-Concepts-Organization/dp/0465016081/ref=sr_1_39_twi_har_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1479405652&sr=1-39&keywords=c.+west+churchman>
$56.50used & new(17 offers)
<https://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/0465016081/ref=sr_1_39_olp?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1479405652&sr=1-39&keywords=c.+west+churchman>

the above is from amazon, it is not in print.
In the delphi method book which is free on my website chapter 2 looks at
the Delphi Method using
Churchman's concept of the philosophy of science as a set of inquiry
systems one can place on a computer for the interaction
among a group in  a profession.
that is at http://is.njit.edu/turoff and you can either download the whole
book as a binary file or you can look at a list of all the papers
making up the chapters and download the ones you want.    chapter two has
two papers on the philosophies of the methods to design Delphi
communication structures.
<https://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/0465016081/ref=sr_1_39_olp?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1479405652&sr=1-39&keywords=c.+west+churchman>


On Thu, Nov 17, 2016 at 10:21 AM, Cary Gray <cggray at mac.com> wrote:

> I'd like to respond to a number of points, from the perspective of a
> computer scientist who has long been dismayed at how the field teaches
> about the past--or fails to do so.
>
> First, regarding historical content in other science fields:
> My experience as an undergraduate (around 1980) was that elements of
> history were naturally incorporated in the majors' introductory sequences
> for both chemistry and physics.  I definitely recall the material from the
> freshman chemistry survey.  It was common for the physics curriculum to
> recapitulate the later developments in the field by spending a year on
> classical methods before upending all of it in a sophomore-level semester
> of "modern physics".  The labs for the modern physics course I took
> included versions of many of the fundamental experiments of that
> revolution.  I think that jolt was significant in shaping the perspective
> of a few generations of physicists.
>
> I can speculate on several factors that might have led to a decline in
> that material.  My sense is that college-level science curricula have
> generally become more applied, partly because the intro courses are
> dominated by students who do not aspire to becoming chemists or physicists
> (pre-meds, engineers).  I suspect that the rise of Advanced Placement has
> reduced the share of majors who take the introductory courses in college,
> and it is easy for me to imagine that the high school environment would
> have less motivation to bother with the historical perspective.
>
> The place of history in math seems to wax and wane; it has at times been
> fashionable, but is currently not.  The math major at the college where I
> most recently taught is currently capped by a historically framed
> survey/review of the field; many of the students respond enthusiastically
> to putting it all together and say they wish they'd heard more of that
> perspective sooner.  (Whether they'd have cared for it sooner is less
> clear.)  But, a few years ago, external reviewers deprecated the capstone
> as out of step with what is going on elsewhere.
>
> Regarding history in computing:
> I should remind the readers of this list that what interests computists is
> not the same as what interests historians:  the guilds have different
> systems of values.  (Recall the lament from Donald Knuth a couple of years
> back, which is what brought me to this list.)  And "computing" is a very
> big tent; one of the problems in curricula (and in professional societies)
> is that there are very different--and sometimes incompatible--ideas of what
> it is we are about.  We often seem to be unsure just who we mean by "we".
> We claim different titles (CS, CE, SE, IT, IS), and even under those
> headings we differ as to whether we are practitioners, researchers, or
> educators.  And our perspectives on education range from highly
> instrumental to strongly liberal.
>
> Much of what I've seen of history in both computing textbooks and trade
> books has been weak to inaccurate.  It is probably fairly long lead time to
> see improvement in books, but in the near term I think that there is a
> place for an effort focused on equipping faculty; I think that will require
> both putting together resources they can use and more outreach to "sell"
> the need.  The workshops hosted by CRA a few years back were valuable, but
> we still need something much broader and sustained.  I'm interested in
> finding other folks who are interested in working on materials for and
> outreach to both teachers and researchers.
>
>         Cary Gray
>         cggray at mac.com
>
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-- 





*please send messages to murray.turoff at gmail.com <murray.turoff at gmail.com>
do not use @njit.edu <http://njit.edu> addressDistinguished Professor
EmeritusInformation Systems, NJIThomepage: http://is.njit.edu/turoff
<http://is.njit.edu/turoff>*
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