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Foresight Part 1. What is it? Why is it important? What does it do?. What is foresight?. “Foresight: The action of looki ng forward” The O xford English Dicti onary “Chance favours the prepar ed mind” L ouis Pasteur, 1874. Foresight’s ‘deceptive’ world. The problem.
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ForesightPart 1 What is it? Why is it important? What does it do?
What is foresight? “Foresight: The action oflooking forward” The OxfordEnglishDictionary “Chance favours theprepared mind” LouisPasteur,1874
The problem • “Science seeks the laws only, but foresight requires in addition the relevant facts from which the future is to emerge. Of the two tasks for foresight, this selection amid the welter is the more difficult” • Alfred North Whitehead, 1933
Why is foresight important? • Importance arises because foresight: • Prevents the ossification of modes of thought that otherwise lead societies ‘sleepwalking’ into the future • Helps to create a vibrant society in all the six STEEPV (Social, Technological, Economic, Ecology, Politics and Human Values) themes
What does foresight do? • Foresight Identifies new ideas and possibilities for society in the future in the STEEPV themes • It responds to Whitehead’s contention • When done systemically (as it should be) enables the ideas generated to be placed in a systems framework that displays their context and content Let’s now see how!
What we will look at • Different kinds of foresight • Knowledge • Behavioural influences • Where foresight intervenes • ‘Genericness’ and ‘Criticality’
An uncomfortable marriage • Tested information • Untested subjective opinion • Influence of established ways of thinking on understanding unfamiliar information
Different kinds of foresight Real foresight -Typical of entrepreneurs and similar people -Requires independence of mind -Economic independence helps -Risky and contentious ideas -Strong personal commitment Rediscovery -Typical of institutional foresight -Relatively uncontentious -Tends to confirm established ideas -Favoured by ‘establishment people’ and committees -Relatively ‘risk free’
Real foresight versus Rediscovery • Real foresight is concerned with new and unusual ideas typified by inventions, scientific breakthroughs and new social arrangements - the people concerned are ‘lone rangers’ and often spend their lives this way • Rediscovery is typical of people who are new to ‘futures thinking’ or relatively so, and at first spend most of their time ‘rediscovering’ issues, trends, etc. that others first discovered, earlier (sometimes decades earlier!) - this accounts for the relatively ‘risk free’ nature of institutional foresight
Use of expert opinion • Despite a growing trend to discount expertise all foresight depends on it to: • Create a sense of credibility • Draw on the substantive knowledge of individuals with their: • Abilities to anticipate future developments in their field • Imaginative extensions of their knowledge into interrelationships with that of others
Who is an expert and why use them? • What kind of person is an ‘expert’? • How do you recog-nise one? • Why do you make use of ‘experts’ and their knowledge?
Characteristics of ‘experts’ • Experience indicates three important characteristics for expertise • Substantive knowledge - knowing what you are talking about • The ability to cope when asked to extend that knowledge into the uncertain future (assessing ability - though it is really synthesizing ability) • Imagination
Graduation of subjective knowledge & the expert ‘mind’ • Subjective opinion • Synthesis • Synthesizers • Substantive • Speculation • Conjecture
Evolution of criteria since late 60’s Lipinski & Loveridge, 1978 Loveridge, Georghiou & Nedeva, 1995 Unfamiliar- no knowledge (1) Casually acquainted- bar-room knowledge (2) Familiar - knowledge but not in depth (3) Knowledgeable - growing stature or recent expert with new responsibilities (4) Expert - recognized mastery (5) Self-assessment of expertise
Characters • In essence the • Person or small group with ‘real foresight’ are not concerned whether other people agree with them, whereas • Those associated with institutional foresight often have positions to protect; are conscious of their position and tend to be rather heavily bound by preconceived ideas • These characteristics can and do have an influence on the underlying traits of a foresight programme
Foresight and Mitchell’s modification of Maslow’s Hierarchy of needs Real foresight tends to associated here Institutional foresight tends to be associated here
Intersection of human needs, science and technology and forecasting
Horses for courses ordon’t enter an F1 car for the world rally championship
Policy defined • Policy may be defined as a set of • Creative or enabling limits, and • Restrictive limits • Policy begins with visions • Creative and restrictive limits define the boundaries of policy • what can be controlled • what can be partiallycontrolled • what cannotbecontrolled
Critical technologies • According to the RAND Corporation a “Critical technology is generic and pre-competitive and …. is useful in many applications …. to produce a wide array of returns not tied to any specific application ..” • It is not concerned with national security
Generic technologies or ideas are: Those that underpin many others at higher levels Standard Industrial Classification can be a useful starting point Criteria for critical tec-hnologies are: Policy relevant, re-moving the question “Relevant to what?” Discriminating bet-ween what is and is not critical Likely to yield re-producible results ‘Genericness’ and ‘Criticality’
Two definitions of criticality • Generic and pre-competitive, producing wide returnsnot tied to a specific application; likely to have synergetic or catalytic effects elsewhere • Rate determining factor for specific applications gives explicit response to ‘Critical to what?’ but is not universally applicable • Criticality is not concerned with national security