Designing Ourselves and Our World: A Designer-Weaver's Perspective on Services
Abstract
This paper argues that design, particularly service design, plays a significant role in shaping our world by constructing and reconstructing our understanding of it. Rather than a mere means to an end, design is a tool for controlling and producing meaning. Service design plays a crucial role in this process, as it mediates interactions between people and their everyday contexts through services. Design can be seen then as a way of generating culture. By exploring a more systemic approach, service designers can better understand how services shape people's lives and address underlying narratives and discourses that frame relationships between people and their lifeworlds. The designer-weaver metaphor is introduced as a powerful image for understanding the role of the designer in shaping reality. By weaving narratives and discourses together, designers can create new realities. If a better world is to be designed, a better way of designing ourselves is needed.
Keywords
ontological design; service design; culture generation; reality shaping
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3384/ecp203068
Citation
Ramirez, M.(2023) Designing Ourselves and Our World: A Designer-Weaver's Perspective on Services, in Carla Cipolla, Claudia Mont’Alvão, Larissa Farias, Manuela Quaresma (eds.), ServDes 2023: Entanglements & Flows Conference, Service Encounters and Meanings, 11-14th July 2023, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. https://doi.org/10.3384/ecp203068
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
Designing Ourselves and Our World: A Designer-Weaver's Perspective on Services
This paper argues that design, particularly service design, plays a significant role in shaping our world by constructing and reconstructing our understanding of it. Rather than a mere means to an end, design is a tool for controlling and producing meaning. Service design plays a crucial role in this process, as it mediates interactions between people and their everyday contexts through services. Design can be seen then as a way of generating culture. By exploring a more systemic approach, service designers can better understand how services shape people's lives and address underlying narratives and discourses that frame relationships between people and their lifeworlds. The designer-weaver metaphor is introduced as a powerful image for understanding the role of the designer in shaping reality. By weaving narratives and discourses together, designers can create new realities. If a better world is to be designed, a better way of designing ourselves is needed.