Creating Affective Social Design: An ethical and ontological discussion

Author:

Brassett Jamie1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Central Saint Martins

Abstract

The ethics of designing has often been organised according to moral imperatives, and social design not only aligns with such moralities, but perpetuates them without providing a clear critique of the systems to which they adhere. To rid itself of such reactive ideologies, and so to create other conditions for the possibility of its creativity, social design might occupy itself with a different account of ethics altogether. This paper will seek to elucidate such a different ethics along the lines Baruch Spinoza proposed and Gilles Deleuze championed. That is, it will therefore call for an affective designing that operates by creating ethical ontologies. This article will bring an affective, ethical, ontological design to bear on a social entity that emerges from the relations affectivity requires, insofar as it is one that is designed.

Publisher

Cubic Society

Subject

General Medicine

Reference71 articles.

1. Brassett, Jamie. “Affecting Bodies Affecting Design.” Paper presented at Design/Body/Sense, Design History Society, Annual Conference. Kingston University, UK, (2007).

2. Brassett, Jamie. “Creating Different Modes of Existence. Towards an Ontological Ethics of Design.” Paper presented at re: research, IASDR Conference, University of Cincinnati, USA. (October 31– November 02, 2017).

3. Brassett, Jamie. “Networks: Open, Closed or Complex. Connecting Philosophy, Design and Innovation.” In DesignDriven Business Innovation. 2013 IEEE-Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium Proceedings. Edited by Jun Cai, Thomas Lockwood, Chensheng Wang, Gabriel Tong and Jikun Liu, 1–11. Beijing: IEEE, 2013.

4. Brassett, Jamie. “Poised and Complex. The Becoming Each Other of Philosophy, Design and Innovation.” In Deleuze and Design. Edited by Betti Marenko and Jamie Brassett, 31–57. Deleuze Connections Series. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2015.

5. Brassett, Jamie. “The Space-out Subject. Bachelard and Perec.” In Subjectivity and Literature from the Romantics to the Present Day: Creating the Self. Edited by Philip Shaw and Peter Stockwell, 146–58. London: Pinter Publishers, 1991.

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