Zitat des Tages von Edward Tufte:
I think it is important for software to avoiding imposing a cognitive style on workers and their work.
A practical part of my teaching is to provide demonstrative, hands-on experiences.
A curious consequence is that I have become a minor celebrity.
I do believe that there are some universal cognitive tasks that are deep and profound - indeed, so deep and profound that it is worthwhile to understand them in order to design our displays in accord with those tasks.
There are many true statements about complex topics that are too long to fit on a PowerPoint slide.
If you like overheads, you'll love PowerPoint.
That is to say, nature's laws are causal; they reveal themselves by comparison and difference, and they operate at every multivariate space/time point.
The leading edge in evidence presentation is in science; the leading edge in beauty is in high art.
What gets left out is the narrative between the bullets, which would tell us who's going to do what and how we're going to achieve the generic goals on the list.
I am certainly not an intellectual relativist, nor a moral relativist.
What this means is that we shouldn't abbreviate the truth but rather get a new method of presentation.
The commonality between science and art is in trying to see profoundly - to develop strategies of seeing and showing.
I was writing a chapter of Beautiful Evidence on the subject of the sculptural pedestal, which led to my thinking about what's up on the pedestal - the great leader.
My father worked for governments all his life as an engineer and public works director.
The speculative part of my work is that these particular cognitive tasks - ways of thinking analytically - are tied to nature's laws.
I hope that I am generous and tolerant, but certainly on the intellectual side I think that there are discoverable truths, and some things that are closer approximations to the truth than others.
The point of the essay is to change things.
Public discussions are part of what it takes to make changes in the trillions of graphics published each year.
The idea of trying to create things that last - forever knowledge - has guided my work for a long time now.
Beautiful Evidence is about the theory and practice of analytical design.