I'm more and more nervous about what I think Conklin is doing in his book "Dialogue Mapping" (refer my initial
post). I don't think it's helpful to pull social complexity out from wicked problems. As if wicked problems can exist in the absence of social complexity. Or, at least, in the absence of social factors.
Conklin wants to say that wickedness is a property of the "problem/solution space" and social complexity "is a property of the social network that is engaging with the problem".
However, I don't think you can have "wickedness" in a problem unless you have social factors. They are a
necessary condition for wickedness. (However, they are not a
sufficient condition - you need other things as well to get "wickedness").