07-06-2010According to Aristotle, rhetoric is "the ability, in each particular case, to see the available means of persuasion." Med disse ord indledte Kulturminister Per Stig Møller sin åbningstale på den 5. internationale konference om Persuasive Design på Den Sorte Diamant.
Dear Honoured guests
According to Aristotle, rhetoric is"the ability, in each
particular case, to see the available means of persuasion."
Persuasion isthe key concept of the
rhetorical tradition which began in Ancient Greece and which has
formed a most important part of Western cultural history. The
insights of Aristotle and Cicero, as well as much later work within
the rhetorical tradition, are also strikingly relevant for
Persuasive Technology.
And Persuasive Technology is a strikingexample of how
technology and culture - how ultra-modern and age-old concerns -
are interwoven.
We have come a long ways since the Greek discussions on rhetoric
and this is obviously not Hellas! But I am delighted to be with you
here this morning to open this Fifth International Conference on
Persuasive Technology. And I am pleased to see that so many
international researchers and representatives from different
commercial industries have taken the opportunity to join each other
here in the beautiful surroundings of The Royal Library.
Persuasive Technology is a young and vibrant research field, and
I am glad, that The Royal School of Library and Information Science
- in collaboration with Aalborg University and Oulu University -
has been able to attract this conference.
The conference is an example of how disciplines with origins in
a cultural institution can reach out to science, audiences and
commercial industries. And I am certain, that this example is the
future for developing our societies. You are the experts that thinkresearch and design
for the future. You use cutting-edge technologies and, as the title
of the conference states - Design for Change.
Seen from my point of view as Minister for Culture, some of the
general features of software applications using Persuasive
Technology, are very interesting.
The relevance of Persuasive Technology to culture runs both
ways. Persuasive Technology itself can be seen as a technology
based just as much on sociological and humanistic traditions as on
information technology itself.
In a cultural perspective it can justly be seen as the
continuation, or revival, of the age-old rhetorical tradition using
highly modern means. It is an endeavour permeated with the
classical notions of persuasion, kairos and ethos. But on the other
hand, Persuasive Technology is also an obvious basis for making the
cultural experience attractive and appealing to modern people.
Websites that make information accessible with the aim of
motivating users to take an interest in certain information can,
undoubtedly create new possibilities. Websites presenting some part
of our cultural heritage will try to make the field exciting and
attractive. This can also be used in trying to persuade users,
implicitly or explicitly, to go to the theatre, to visit a museum,
a monument or the suchlike in non-virtual reality, too.
Such endeavors are increasingly being combined with using cell
phones to enhance the experience of visiting museums, historical
sites and so forth. The use of cell phones and location-based
services will hopefully become a 'persuasive' tool in helping new
generations to discover the richness of culture.
Today, democratic institutions in Denmark and elsewhere risk
being eroded by a complacency and indifference towards people's own
history and culture. If we are too lazy to study our past and
culture, we become blind to the fact that democracy requires active
citizen participation to sustain itself.
And therefore a persuasive aspect can be necessary to show
people the way.
To give you an example - recently, a pilot project has developed
a proposal on how to use Persuasive Technology for cultural
communication at one important historic site in Denmark, namely the
Vicarage of Vedersoe, where the Danish theologian and playwright
Kaj Munk lived.
Kaj Munk also became a figure of national resistance, speaking
out against Nazism in his sermons and elsewhere. And for that
reason he was murdered by the SS in 1944.
I have myself researched Kaj Munk and published a very thick and
academic book on his life - which for some people might take some
persuasion to get them to read. So I have also published a
smaller one.
The new project proposes making use of mobile devices and
location-based services at Vedersoe Vicarage. This will motivate
enthusiasts for mobile devices and geo-caching to visit the
vicarage. It will also enrich the cultural experience
of visitors in general.
Based on these experiences, users may be further motivated to
use a software application, the successful use of which depends on
finding out about facts and items connected with Kaj Munk. And in
the end maybe even read thick books about Kaj Munk himself!!
I wish you all a most interesting conference and I will most
certainly look forward to hearing about the results of the
conference and the achievements in this field in coming years.