Going Critical: Perspective and Proportion in the Epistemology of Rob Kling1 John Leslie King



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Going Critical:

Perspective and Proportion in the Epistemology of Rob Kling1

John Leslie King

School of Information

University of Michigan

Ann Arbor MI 48109

+1 734-647-3576

jlking@umich.edu


Suzanne Iacono

National Science Foundation

4201 Wilson Boulevard

Arlington VA 22230

+1 703-292-8930

siacono@nsf.gov


Jonathan Grudin

Microsoft Research

One Microsoft Way

Redmond, WA 98052

+1 425 706 0784

jgrudin@microsoft.com



Abstract
One foundational element of Rob Kling's body of research and writing is its critical perspective on the nature, role and dynamics of computerization. His main argument was that one should view as dubious any statements that are not grounded in empirical evidence or theoretical analysis, particularly when the implications appear to benefit those making the statements, such as vendors, the public press, and government officials. Rob's work was replete with successful instances of critical refutation, in which he challenged assumptions or statements about computerization and provided convincing alternative interpretations. Much of his work delivered powerful indictments against sloppy conjecture and hyperbolic statements that claimed either utopian or dystopian outcomes from computerization. At the same time, some of his own assessments of the implications of emerging technologies tended to be dismissive and marginalizing, revealing in his own thinking some of the weaknesses he relished in pointing out in others' rhetoric and writing. This paper identifies intellectual traps inherent in critical perspectives that can catch even the most acute practitioners. The objective is to help elucidate and stabilize the epistemological foundations for Rob’s critical perspective on the role of computerization.
Keywords: critical perspective, social informatics.

We’ll understand it better in the sweet by and by,

All will be one, all will be one.

We won’t have to worry and we won’t have to cry,

Over in the old Golden Land.2


1.Introduction

In 1966, Rob Kling began studying Artificial Intelligence at Stanford. Arguably the most famous member of his cohort was Shakey, the mobile robot system that appeared in the Stanford Research Center the same year. By 1968, Shakey performed route-finding and object rearrangement tasks perhaps on a par with a human two-year old, earning a mention in the New York Times. Two years later, Life magazine declared that Shakey was “the first electronic person” and National Geographic (1970) included a picture of Shakey among its lineup of exotic indigenous peoples.


The Life article quoted Marvin Minsky: “In from three to eight years we will have a machine with the general intelligence of an average human being. I mean a machine that will be able to read Shakespeare, grease a car, play office politics, tell a joke, have a fight. At that point the machine will begin to educate itself with fantastic speed. In a few months it will be at genius level and a few months after that its powers will be incalculable.” (Darrach, 1970, p. 60). Other AI researchers consulted by the Life writer found this timetable somewhat ambitious: “‘give us 15 years’ was a common remark—but all agreed that there would be such a machine and that it would precipitate the third Industrial Revolution, wipe out war and poverty and roll up centuries of growth in science, education and the arts.” Based on such conversations, the author concluded that “computers could free billions of people to spend most of their time doing pretty much as they damn please” (Darrach, 1970, p. 65).
Rob parted ways with the un-self-critical AI mainstream in 1973 with two papers -- an editorial titled, “Notes on the Social Impact of AI,” that appeared in the SIGART Newsletter and a paper titled, “Toward a Person-Centered Computing Technology,” in the Fall Joint Computer Conference.3 In those papers, Rob adopted a critical analytic perspective, foreshadowing one of the most important aspects of his career as a student, teacher, and researcher on computerization. The root of the critical perspective is "critic," from the Greek krites, or judge -- a person who offers a value judgment or interpretation of what is witnessed or heard. A critical perspective, from Rob's point of view, entailed a strong inclination to view as dubious any statement that was not grounded in empirical evidence or theoretical analysis, particularly those that encouraged people to take actions that would ultimately benefit those making the statement. If Rob had a personal motto, it might have been, “Think it through.” He was a true student of the enlightenment, with a deep belief that power corrupted and that reason could prevail.
It is not a coincidence that Rob’s critical perspective evolved during an era of exceptional hyperbole surrounding AI. Only a few years after Minsky’s prophecy failed utterly, AI was back with reborn enthusiasm for production systems, knowledge engineering, and neural networks. Rob’s Ph.D. advisor, Edward Feigenbaum, was one of the loudest cheerleaders for knowledge engineering. He all but predicted imminent Japanese dominance of computing in the highly influential book, The Fifth Generation: Artificial Intelligence and Japan’s Challenge to the World (1983). AI has been highly seasonal, with summers of exaggerated prediction followed by winters of disappointing results, but on the whole the summers seem to take the upper hand (e.g., The Age of Spiritual Machines by Ray Kurzweil and Robot: Mere Machine to Transcendent Mind by Hans Moravec, both published in 1999).
Rob’s critical perspective was not biased against technology; he was personally in love with technology, as anyone who ever heard him talk about high fidelity stereo equipment can testify. Still, critical refutation was a hallmark of his scholarly work. He routinely challenged assumptions or statements about the nature or role of computerization and provided convincing alternative interpretations of the issues at hand. Much of his work delivered powerful indictments against sloppy conjecture and hyperbole claiming either utopian or dystopian outcomes from technology, in general, and computerization, in particular. His critical perspective had a strong influence on others, generating a field of studies related to the complex social contexts that could constrain, alter, or negate predicted effects of computerization.
Although a valuable corrective, such a strong critical perspective can be non-reflective and too quick to dismiss other points of view, and in this way display some of the same weaknesses of the positions Rob challenged. In a sense, Rob became invested in dismissals of what he called “breathless” accounts or “glossy” images of large-scale social and economic transformation brought about by digital technologies. He took a highly protectionist stance toward the common person and regaled against class advantages that technology might have for the rich and powerful, at times before such advantages had been demonstrated. In addition, some of his assessments of the implications of emerging technologies, at least as seen by his co-workers, tended to dismiss and marginalize trends that later proved to be important. It is instructive that a person as brilliant and perceptive as Rob could fall victim to the trap of letting a critical perspective dictate what outcomes would be realized. This is not a matter of weakness in Rob’s scholarship; he was a disciplined scholar. Rather, it is a cautionary note about the siren’s call of critical perspectives in general, and particularly when applied to the rapid change in computerization over the past quarter century.
This paper addresses intellectual traps inherent in critical perspectives that can catch even the most acute practitioners. Our objective is to help elucidate and stabilize the epistemological foundations for Rob's critical perspective on the role of computerization movements. The purpose of the paper is to highlight the strengths of the critical perspective as it evolved in Rob’s work, while at the same time to illustrate the problems with an uncritical critical perspective. In essence, this is a narrative of achieving and sustaining critical balance.



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