Designs for Compliance

Holistic technologies are normally associated with the notion of craft. Artisans, be they potters, weavers, metal-smiths, or cooks, control the process of their own work from beginning to end. Their hands and minds make the product... Prescriptive technologies, on the other hand, are designs for compliance.

Ursula Franklin, The Real World of Technology (CBC Massey Lectures) (1989) · Excerpt

Ursula Franklin delivered these lectures in 1989, thinking about industrial production, nuclear technology, and the quiet ways that technical systems reshape social life. She wasn’t imagining anything like today’s generative tools. But the distinction she draws in this passage, part of a much longer and more nuanced argument, carries a particular charge for anyone who makes creative work now.

The word to linger on is “compliance.” Franklin observed that when a process is divided into prescribed steps, each participant performs their part without needing to understand or govern the whole. What gets lost is the feedback loop between maker and material: the constant adjustment that happens when an artisan feels resistance, hears a false note, senses the work pulling in an unexpected direction. A potter compensates as the clay drifts. A writer revises mid-sentence before reaching the period. Franklin calls this way of working holistic, and she means something precise by it. It describes not just a feeling but a structure of work in which knowledge develops through sustained contact with the thing being made.

Her question goes beyond whether any particular tool is good or bad. She asks whether a given way of working allows the maker to remain what she calls the “primary source of action.” Many of us are discovering, in real time, how fluid that boundary can be. A tool might handle the tedious stretches and free us for the decisions that matter most. Or it might, by degrees, begin defining which decisions matter, shaping our sense of the work until we find ourselves choosing among options rather than generating from understanding. Both of these can happen in the same afternoon, within the same project.

Franklin doesn’t prescribe an answer. She asks us to notice the structure. Where, in the process, does judgment actually live? On days when the work moves fast and frictionless and leaves behind a faint residue of dissatisfaction, that question can be worth sitting with.

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