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to zero, as it were. From being essentially 16 years late,
the project is suddenly well ahead of schedule.
Reverting to real solutions, I suppose that Peter G.
Neumann and his ACM risk analyticals2 are redrawing
the familiar conclusions from the NHS saga: overly grand
plans are overly risky! Even the word grand invites disas-
ter—witness Napoleon’s Grande Armée and the fate of so
many grand dukes. Are there some projects that just resist
decomposition but must be tackled as a whole? Neumann
is aware of the pros and cons of holism in both the medical and SD (systems development) domains. 3 Some might
find echoes of past Stanford Research, pre-SRI, “close
encounters” with pseudoscience and the paranormal
when Neumann tabulates various holistic and nonholistic
philosophies. Under holistic “alternative health care (cure
the causes),” he lumps together, approvingly:
“Whole-person approaches such as proactive prevention,
homeopathy, acupuncture, diet, exercise, and orthomolecular rebalancing can lead to long-term sustainability,
less drug use, lower overall costs.”
The nonholistic nonalternative (i.e., the maligned
“traditional” approach to medicine and health care)
comes out badly:
“Allopathic medicine (treat the symptoms): Suppressing
symptoms (with pharmaceuticals, radiation, chemotherapy, corticosteroids) causes iatrogenic effects. Antibiotic
overuse induces mutations of resistant bacteria. Long-term effects may offset short-term benefits.”
There are sound points here, lurking in a skewed
dichotomy. The downside to allopathic treatment is
acknowledged by traditionalists who urge many of the
preventive proactions listed as holistic. Diet and exercise
are hardly “alternatives,” except perhaps to the Jolt/pizza-stereotype programmers who are now busy Googling the
meaning of Diet + Exercise. Yet the mention of homeopathy and orthomolecular balancing (also known as
“Eat lots of organic broccoli!” 4) brings instant pause. I
find “less drug use” and “treat the symptom” in opposite columns a tad problematic, given recent verdicts on
the ineffectiveness of homeopathy (beyond the placebo
effect), where the “causes are cured” using barely detectable, serially diluted amounts of the “drug” (nonorthodox
molecules?) thought to be the cause of the symptoms.
The subject abounds with teasing paradoxes and
conflicting definitions of holistic as one moves around
the domains. When comparing holistic and nonholistic
systems development, Neumann again reveals a bias,
albeit a less contentious one. Holistic SD is characterized
as “principled SD” in opposition to nonholistic as er, er,
“unprincipled.” As defined, we cannot help but side with
the holistic angels, etymologically wholesome, who make
“pervasive use of requirements, specifications, composable system architectures, sound software engineering
practice, design for trustworthiness, evolvability, maintainability...” All of which “...can enhance long-term
sustainability and yield overall cost savings.”
They also serve the best apple pies, brush their teeth,
and landscape their parents’ graves.
Heading to join Judas in inferno are the unprincipled
so-called developers who scarcely deserve to have the
predicate “system” whispered in nearby strings. Their
“seat-of-the-pants ad-hoc constructions lead to rampant
vulnerabilities, low assurance, patch-and-pray system
administration, continual remediation, iatrogenic
upgrades, cost overruns, development delays, system failures, project failures, wasted human resources.”
Quit stalling, Peter. What d’you really think of these
unprincipled bastards?
Iatrogenesis, invoked here in both medical and SD
contexts, has suffered some semantic dilution over the
years. Originally meaning the side effects of healing, good
or bad, it now commonly refers to the (usually unintended) harmful effects of medical treatments (in the widest possible sense). As such, it has its own vast literature
and an American Iatrogenic Association doing its best to
keep physicians loyal to their Hippocratic oaths.
The basic ethical dictum, “First, do no harm,” is usefully carried over by Neumann into the SD arena, where
we all know the dangers of the hasty Band-Aid and its
extreme manifestation, the one-line-patch. 5 Incidentally,
Neumann refers to the nonholistic “patch-and-pray”
debugging method, inviting the question as to which
God or gods are to be besought by the unprincipled. We
do know that the official Hippocratic Oath is “sworn by”
Apollo (CTO), his son Asclepius (general practitioner),
and Asclepius’s daughters Hygieia (rubber-gloved prevention) and Panacea (holistic healing). A divine family, each
a specialist with top qualifications. In my own prayers I
add the other four daughters: Iaso (long-term recuperation), Aceso (antibiotics), Aglaea (cosmetic surgery), and
Meditrina (longevity/cryogenics). You can’t be too careful.
Elsewhere, I have devised suitable prayers (and sacrifices) to ensure success in diverse SD and IT projects.
Suffice it to mention that Jupiter attracts special entreaties
when faced with I/O problems. 6