Top 68 Quotes & Sayings by Edward Tufte

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American educator Edward Tufte.
Last updated on November 26, 2024.
Edward Tufte

Edward Rolf Tufte, sometimes known as "ET", is an American statistician and professor emeritus of political science, statistics, and computer science at Yale University. He is noted for his writings on information design and as a pioneer in the field of data visualization.

Public discussions are part of what it takes to make changes in the trillions of graphics published each year.
There are many true statements about complex topics that are too long to fit on a PowerPoint slide.
I do believe that there are some universal cognitive tasks that are deep and profound - indeed, so deep and profound that it is worthwhile to understand them in order to design our displays in accord with those tasks.
My idea here is that, inasmuch as certain cognitive tasks and principles are tied to nature's laws, these tasks and principles are indifferent to language, culture, gender, or the particular mode of information that is provided.
Beautiful Evidence is about the theory and practice of analytical design. — © Edward Tufte
Beautiful Evidence is about the theory and practice of analytical design.
What gets left out is the narrative between the bullets, which would tell us who's going to do what and how we're going to achieve the generic goals on the list.
That is to say, nature's laws are causal; they reveal themselves by comparison and difference, and they operate at every multivariate space/time point.
What this means is that we shouldn't abbreviate the truth but rather get a new method of presentation.
The point of the essay is to change things.
It is straightforward for me to be ethical, responsible, and kind-hearted because I have the resources to support that.
The goal is to provide analytical tools that will last students a lifetime.
I think it is important for software to avoiding imposing a cognitive style on workers and their work.
A curious consequence is that I have become a minor celebrity.
I am certainly not an intellectual relativist, nor a moral relativist.
I was writing a chapter of Beautiful Evidence on the subject of the sculptural pedestal, which led to my thinking about what's up on the pedestal - the great leader. — © Edward Tufte
I was writing a chapter of Beautiful Evidence on the subject of the sculptural pedestal, which led to my thinking about what's up on the pedestal - the great leader.
My father worked for governments all his life as an engineer and public works director.
The idea of trying to create things that last - forever knowledge - has guided my work for a long time now.
The minimum we should hope for with any display technology is that it should do no harm.
A practical part of my teaching is to provide demonstrative, hands-on experiences.
If you like overheads, you'll love PowerPoint.
I hope that I am generous and tolerant, but certainly on the intellectual side I think that there are discoverable truths, and some things that are closer approximations to the truth than others.
The leading edge in evidence presentation is in science; the leading edge in beauty is in high art.
The commonality between science and art is in trying to see profoundly - to develop strategies of seeing and showing.
The speculative part of my work is that these particular cognitive tasks - ways of thinking analytically - are tied to nature's laws.
Confusion and clutter are failures of design, not attributes of information. And so the point is to find design strategies that reveal detail and complexity - rather than to fault the data for an excess of complication. Or, worse, to fault viewers for a lack of understanding.
Great design is not democratic; it comes from great designers. If the standard is lousy, then develop another standard.
Design isn't crafting a beautiful, textured button with breathtaking animation. It's figuring out if there's a way to get rid of the button altogether.
Design cannot rescue failed content.
If your words or images are not on point, making them dance in color won't make them relevant.
The essential test of design is how well it assists the understanding of the content, not how stylish it is.
The world is complex, dynamic, multidimensiona l; the paper is static, flat. How are we to represent the rich visual world of experience and measurement on mere flatland?
The best graphics are about the useful and important, about life and death, about the universe. Beautiful graphics do not traffic with the trivial.
The most common user action on a Web site is to flee.
If the statistics are boring, you've got the wrong numbers.
Good design is clear thinking made visible, bad design is stupidity made visible
PowerPoint is like being trapped in the style of early Egyptian flatland cartoons rather than using the more effective tools of Renaissance visual representation.
The world is generally multivariate
Clutter and confusion are failures of design, not attributes of information.
Clutter is not a property of information. Clutter is a failure of design.
Make all visual distinctions as subtle as possible, but still clear and effective. — © Edward Tufte
Make all visual distinctions as subtle as possible, but still clear and effective.
I have stared long enough at the glowing flat rectangles of computer screens. Let us give more time for doing things in the real world...plant a plant, walk the dogs, read a real book, go to the opera.
In general, I think audiences are a lot smarter than people think. So, it's not "know your audience", it's "respect your audience, and really know your content".
Graphical excellence is that which gives to the viewer the greatest number of ideas in the shortest time with the least ink in the smallest space.
If you’re told what to look for, you can’t see anything else.
PowerPoint presentations too often resemble a school play - very loud, very slow, and very simple.
The world is much more interesting than any one discipline.
The idea is that the content is the interface, the information is the interface, not computer-administrative debris.
Here's the general theory: To clarify, add detail. Imagine that. To clarify, add detail. And clutter and overload are not an attribute of information, they are failures of design. If the information is in chaos, don't start throwing out information, instead fix the design.
An open mind but not an empty head.
What is to be sought in designs for the display of information is the clear portrayal of complexity. Not the complication of the simple; rather the task of the designer is to give visual access to the subtle and the difficult - that is, revelation of the complex.
Simple design, intense content. — © Edward Tufte
Simple design, intense content.
It is not how much empty space there is, but rather how it is used. It is not how much information there is, but rather how effectively it is arranged.
Above all else show the data.
There is no such thing as information overload, just bad design. If something is cluttered and/or confusing, fix your design.
If your words aren't truthful, the finest optically letter-spaced typography won't help.
Good design is a lot like clear thinking made visual.
Only drug dealers and software companies call their customers 'users'
Science and art have in common intense seeing, the wide-eyed observing that generates empirical information.
That is to say, nature's laws are causal; they reveal themselves by comparison and difference, and they operate at every multivariate space, time point.
There are only two industries that refer to their customers as 'users'.
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