Marginalization and Recovery: The Emergence of Aristotelian Themes in Organization Studies
- 1 July 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Organization Studies
- Vol. 18 (4) , 655-683
- https://doi.org/10.1177/017084069701800405
Abstract
The past decade has witnessed a number of interesting shifts in the way people think about organizations. One of the most curious is the way in which much of the 'new thinking' is antithetical to mechanistic and rationalistic theories that have historically dominated organization and management studies. This paper investigates this shift, and argues that this new antithetical thinking can be interpreted as the re-surfacing, or recovery, of certain strands of Aristotelian philosophy, strands that were marginalized with the rise of scientific rational ism in the 17th century, before management and organization studies, as we tend to conceive of them, began. The discussion presented here demonstrates the traditional dominance of a disciplinary, mechanistic self-image in manage ment studies, whereby the field drew its boundaries in such a way as to exclude anything 'other' than this. We argue that reconnecting organizational and man agement research with systems of thought other than those traditionally associ ated with the 'discipline', and adopting a 'kaleidoscopic' view of history, can enable researchers to think differently about key issues and inform future development. Key aspects of Aristotle's thinking are considered as a case in point.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Business Ethics: A view from the TrenchesCalifornia Management Review, 1995
- Third‐order Organizational Change and the Western Mystical TraditionJournal of Organizational Change Management, 1994
- OR Enactment: the Theatrical Metaphor as an Analytic FrameworkJournal of the Operational Research Society, 1993
- Design and Devotion: Surges of Rational and Normative Ideologies of Control in Managerial DiscourseAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1992
- History as a Mode of Inquiry in Organizational Life: A Role for Human CosmogonyHuman Relations, 1991
- Organizational Learning and Communities-of-Practice: Toward a Unified View of Working, Learning, and InnovationOrganization Science, 1991
- Beyond the objectivist and the subjectivist: Learning to read accounting as textAccounting, Organizations and Society, 1989
- From Optimizing to Learning: A Development of Systems Thinking for the 1990sJournal of the Operational Research Society, 1985
- The Future of Operational Research is PastJournal of the Operational Research Society, 1979
- The Development of Za in Medieval JapanBusiness History Review, 1973