posts tagged humanities
New Danish textbook out with contribution from ReD Associates on tools for doing fieldwork in teams.
Simon Critchley, Professor of Philosophy at Barnard College, sits with Christian Madsbjerg to talk about the explanatory limits of scientism and the models that allow us to develop a substantive understand of human behavior.
Christian Madsbjerg and Mikkel Rasmussen, authors of The Moment of Clarity, in conversation with Tim Sullivan, editorial director of Havard Business Review. Here, Christian Madsbjerg and Mikkel Rasmussen discuss the need for the human sciences to help businesses innovate in contexts of great uncertainty.
The paper was presented at the EPIC conference 2015 in Sao Paulo.
In this paper I propose that applied ethnographers should think critically and innovatively about the practice of producing fieldnotes in ethnographic research.
For-profit companies, on the other hand, are placing ever-greater emphasis on building a deep understanding of people and are looking to the social sciences for insights to help solve their most complex problems. Nonprofits seem to be lagging behind.
Tao Ruspoli’s new movie, Being in the World: A Celebration of Being Human in a Technological Age, explores the tension between being spontaneous and being rational.
Christian Madsbjerg talks to J. Massey on the Cash Flow Diary podcast. The episode goes deep into understanding customers as people instead of just abstractions and how to make better business decisions.
LE CERCLE/POINT DE VUE - La France a un avantage culturel unique grâce à la présence importante des sciences sociales dans la société. Nos entreprises devraient y voir une opportunité.
The more we rely on AI and machine learning, the more work we need social scientists and humanities experts to do.
As thousands of neuroscience findings are called into question, the new study out of Sweden offers an opportunity to reprioritize. What kind of information provides the most apt description of how you first fell in love?
In a world with a high degree of uncertainty, the insights from the humanities are the key to future.
Responding to the Washington Post article “Do we need more humanities majors?,” ReD Associates co-founders Christian Madsbjerg and Mikkel B. Rasmussen argue that the answer is a definitive yes.