The Organization as Artifact: Structuring the Organization in Times of Constant, Dramatic Change
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
5-11-2009
Abstract
A normative truth is a phenomenon that two or more people agree to accept as true, and whose truth or falsity is almost wholly determined by that acceptance. For example, the virtue (or lack thereof) of patriotism is a normative truth, for neither virtue nor patriotism exists in the natural universe; 2 + 2 = 4 is a normative truth, for equality is a relationship which has no material reality in the natural universe. The myriad of human social organizational forms (from cultures, to governments, to businesses) are normative truths. Note, however, that these normative truths are not artificial, are not superficial, are not inconsequential. They are as real as the universe itself. But they are not “natural,” they do not transcend man, and they are not indifferent to man’s knowledge, i.e., they do not exist as they exist unless and until people give them existence as such. They are not artificial; they are artifactual. The failure to recognize this has led to crises in government, the arts, and business. The ability to actively and creatively deal with it has led to some marked successes in many fields of human endeavour.
Publication
Design Principles and Practices: An International Journal—Annual Review
Publisher
Common Ground Research Networks
Volume
3
Issue
2
Pages
135-148
Department
College of Business and Management
Peer Reviewed
1
Recommended Citation
Cipolla, J. M. (2009). The organization as artifact: Structuring the organization in times of constant, dramatic change. Design Principles and Practices: An International Journal—Annual Review, 3(2), 135-148. https://doi.org/10.18848/1833-1874/CGP/v03i02/37640