Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 47/Towards freedom in work"
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{{tab}}Man­age­ment, though it has yet to be ad­mit­ted in the lit­er­at­ure, is a {{p|9}}power activ­ity. Power is the pro­duc­tion of in­tended ef­fects <ref>{{w|Russell|Bertrand_Russell}}: {{w|''Power''|Power:_A_New_Social_Analysis}} (W. W. Norton 1938)</ref>. Pro­fes­sor {{w|Tawney|R._H._Tawney}}{{s}} defin­i­tion deals with power in a human situ­a­tion, for man­age­ment is a kind of power rela­tion­ship be­tween human beings. Tawney says: | {{tab}}Man­age­ment, though it has yet to be ad­mit­ted in the lit­er­at­ure, is a {{p|9}}power activ­ity. Power is the pro­duc­tion of in­tended ef­fects <ref>{{w|Russell|Bertrand_Russell}}: {{w|''Power''|Power:_A_New_Social_Analysis}} (W. W. Norton 1938)</ref>. Pro­fes­sor {{w|Tawney|R._H._Tawney}}{{s}} defin­i­tion deals with power in a human situ­a­tion, for man­age­ment is a kind of power rela­tion­ship be­tween human beings. Tawney says: | ||
− | {{tab}}{{qq|Power may be defined as the cap­acity of an indi­vidual, or group of indi­vidu­als, to mod­ify the con­duct of other indi­vidu­als or groups in the man­ner which he (the power-<wbr>holder) de­sires}} <ref>{{w|Tawney|R._H._Tawney}}: {{l|''Equality''|http://explore.bl.uk/BLVU1:LSCOP-ALL:BLL01011516317}} (Harcourt Brace 1931)</ref> | + | {{tab}}{{qq|Power may be defined as the cap­acity of an indi­vidual, or group of indi­vidu­als, to mod­ify the con­duct of other indi­vidu­als or groups in the man­ner which he (the power-<wbr>holder) de­sires}}. <ref>{{w|Tawney|R._H._Tawney}}: {{l|''Equality''|http://explore.bl.uk/BLVU1:LSCOP-ALL:BLL01011516317}} (Harcourt Brace 1931)</ref> |
{{tab}}It is clear that man­age­ment is a power activ­ity, but what is not made clear in the lit­er­at­ure is that the power is not given by those led<!-- 'lead' in original --> as in lead­er­ship, but is granted to man­age­ment by the eco­nomic for­mula which makes the power legal and is en­dowed by ex­ist­ing power holders within the busi­ness hier­archy. Thus man­age­ment{{s}} power at root is formal au­thor­ity. | {{tab}}It is clear that man­age­ment is a power activ­ity, but what is not made clear in the lit­er­at­ure is that the power is not given by those led<!-- 'lead' in original --> as in lead­er­ship, but is granted to man­age­ment by the eco­nomic for­mula which makes the power legal and is en­dowed by ex­ist­ing power holders within the busi­ness hier­archy. Thus man­age­ment{{s}} power at root is formal au­thor­ity. | ||
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{{p|s3}}'''Man­age­ment{{s}} Work Doc­trine''' | {{p|s3}}'''Man­age­ment{{s}} Work Doc­trine''' | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}Man­age­ment doc­trine, as with other polit­ical and eco­nomic doc­trines, serves to jus­tify the hold­ers of power and those of the group or class with which the power-<wbr>hold­ers iden­tify <ref name="four" />. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}Some of the doc­trinal as­sump­tions are: | ||
+ | |||
+ | 1. That lead­er­ship is a com­pon­ent of ortho­dox man­age­ment activ­ity. (This we have ex­amined.) | ||
+ | |||
+ | 2. That man­age­ment is or can be a pro­fes­sional body with an eth­ical code in­de­pend­ent of the code of the policy-<wbr>making group which em­ploys {{p|10}}man­age­ment as agent and with which man­age­ment neces­sar­ily iden­ti­fies. The latter part of the fore­going sen­tence con­tains the answer to the first part. | ||
+ | |||
+ | 3. That the ortho­dox man­age­ment pro­cess and struc­ture is the best pos­sible and there is no reason­able al­tern­at­ive. | ||
+ | |||
+ | 4. That the de­ci­sion-<wbr>making pro­cess is by right and, in terms<!-- 'interms' in original --> of busi­ness ef­fi­ciency, the sole pre­rog­at­ive of man­age­ment, (i.e. the man­agers-<wbr>must-<wbr>manage philo­sophy of the {{w|Harvard Busi­ness School|Harvard_Business_School}}, the meth­ods of which are being humbly copied in British busi­ness schools.) | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}The mat­ter of whether there is a reason­able al­tern­at­ive to ortho­dox man­age­ment pro­cess and struc­ture re­mains to be ex­amined, but that de­ci­sion-<wbr>making is the sole pre­rog­at­ive of man­age­ment is ques­tion­able. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}It has been shown that man­age­ment is a skilled power activ­ity. Power is de­ci­sion-<wbr>making or par­ti­ci­pa­tion in the making of de­ci­sions. A has power over B with re­spect to value C, when A par­ti­ci­pates in de­ci­sion-<wbr>making af­fect­ing the C policy of B <ref name="four" />. In other words, the man­ager has power over a non-<wbr>man­aging worker (or a sub­ord­in­ate man­ager) in re­spect of money when the man­ager de­cides that the bonus re­ward for a cer­tain job, which the man­aged-<wbr>one does to earn money, is so much money. Like­wise, a man­ager ex­hib­its power when he de­cides to move Bill from the job Bill likes to another job which Bill doesn{{t}} like. This is power with re­spect to a man{{s}} de­sires and feel­ings. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}In his book {{l|''De­ci­sion-making and Pro­ductiv­ity''|http://explore.bl.uk/BLVU1:LSCOP-ALL:BLL01002453919}}, Pro­fes­sor {{w|Melman|Seymour_Melman}}, as will later be shown, in­dic­ates factu­ally how fool­ish is the man­age­ment doc­trine that the man­agers must man­age, <ref>{{w|Melman|Seymour_Melman}}: {{l|''De­ci­sion-Making and Pro­ductiv­ity''|http://explore.bl.uk/BLVU1:LSCOP-ALL:BLL01002453919}} (Blackwell 1958)</ref>, as does Pro­fes­sor {{w|Likert<!-- 'Lickert' in original -->|Rensis_Likert}} in his {{l|''New Pat­terns of Man­age­ment''|http://explore.bl.uk/BLVU1:LSCOP-ALL:BLL01002168374}} <ref>{{w|Likert|Rensis_Likert}}: {{l|''New Pat­terns of Man­age­ment''|http://explore.bl.uk/BLVU1:LSCOP-ALL:BLL01002168374}} (McGraw-Hill 1961)</ref>. But the change from cen­tral­ised de­ci­sion-<wbr>making to shared de­ci­sion-<wbr>making is not easy. For the hold­ers of power, if they are not en­light­ened by ma­ture in­sight, tend to hold on to their power. As {{w|Lord Acton|John_Dalberg-Acton,_1st_Baron_Acton}} said, {{qq|Power cor­rupts; ab­so­lute power cor­rupts ab­so­lutely}}. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}I like the philo­sopher {{w|Roger Bacon|Roger_Bacon}} on the ef­fect of power on man, (I will mis­quote slightly): {{qq|Man doeth like the ape, the higher he goeth the more he show­eth his ass}}. Power is of an en­croach­ing na­ture, or, as the polit­ical sci­ent­ist {{w|Michels|Robert_Michels}} put it: | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}{{qq|Every human power seeks to en­large its pre­rog­at­ives. He who has ac­quired power will al­most al­ways en­deavour to con­solid­ate and to ex­tend it, to mul­ti­ply the ram­parts which de­fend his posi­tion, and to with­draw him­self from the con­trol of the masses}}. <ref>{{w|Michels|Robert_Michels}}: {{w|''Polit­ical Part­ies''|Political_Parties}} (Hearsts 1915)</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}Part of the man­age­ment doc­trine has to do with work, but, it should be said, the idea of work held by man­age­ment is that held by<!-- 'management is that held by' removed --> the ma­jor­ity of people: | ||
+ | |||
+ | 1. Work is ef­fort ap­plied for the ma­ter­ial values which in­come from work will buy. (Eco­nomic the­ory.) | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}There is a corol­lary to this defin­i­tion of work and this com­pre­hends the no­tion of eco­nomic man: | ||
+ | |||
+ | 1a. A whole man can wholly be bought for money and money in­cent­ives. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}Many man­agers will rightly re­ject the corol­lary<!-- 'corrollary in original' --> out of hand, but on the whole, judging in terms of eco­nomic tech­niques, the corol­lary {{p|11}}ex­presses eco­nomic doc­trine. It is true that some men will sacri­fice money for status, but not will­ingly in the fol­low­ing case of the loyal forty-<wbr>years ser­vice clerk who went to the boss in a {{w|wool­len mill|Textile_manufacturing}} for a rise from £1 a week. In those days the top men in the wool­len trade wore {{w|top hats|Top_hat}}, and the boss re­plied, {{qq|Ah wain{{t}} gie thee a rise Nathan, but that has been a guid and faith­ful ser­vant so on Mon­day tha can come ti wark in a top {{a}}at.}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}If we com­pare other defin­i­tions of work with that given above we will find our­selves leav­ing the con­ceal­ing smoke of eco­nomic work, and breath­ing a sweeter air: | ||
+ | |||
+ | 2. Work is prayer; prayer is work. ({{w|St. Benedict|Benedict_of_Nursia}}). | ||
+ | |||
+ | 3. I pray with the floor and the bench. ({{w|Hasidic Juda­ism|Hasidic_Judaism}}). | ||
+ | |||
+ | 4. Labour is the great real­ity of human<!-- 'uhman' in original --> life. In labour there is a truth of re­demp­tion and a truth of the con­struct­ive power of man. ({{w|Berdyaev|Nikolai_Berdyaev}}). | ||
+ | |||
+ | 5. Laying stress on the im­port­ance of work has a greater ef­fect than any other tech­nique of real­ity living. ({{w|Freud|Sigmund_Freud}}). | ||
+ | |||
+ | 6. Work and love are the two chief com­pon­ents in the growth of ma­ture per­son­al­ity in com­mun­ity. ({{w|Erich Fromm|Erich_Fromm}}). | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}Although our stress is on the psy­cho­lo­gical value of work, as in Freud, Fromm and others, it would be pleas­ing if we had more room to de­velop a work philo­sophy and to quote the poet{{s|r}} work vi­sions, the fine work philo­sophy in the {{w|Hindu|Hinduism}} {{l|''Bhagavat Gita''|https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/gita/agsgita.htm}} ({{w|Gandhi|Mahatma_Gandhi}}{{s}} {{w|Karma Yoga|Karma_yoga}}), {{w|Zen Buddhism|Zen}}, which some­what paral­lels {{w|Bene­dict­ine|Benedictines}} work prac­tice, {{w|Chin­ese|Tang_dynasty}} {{w|neo-<wbr>Confu­cian­ism|Neo-Confucianism}} which af­firms the {{q|Tao or Way|Tao#Confucian_interpretations}} as that of draw­ing water and gather­ing wood, and as the mar­riage of the sub­lime and the com­mon­place, and the re­spect for the com­mon task in {{l|Isaiah|https://www.sacred-texts.com/bib/poly/isa.htm}}, {{l|Deutero­nomy|https://www.sacred-texts.com/bib/poly/deu.htm}} and {{l|Ecclesi­astes|https://www.sacred-texts.com/bib/poly/ecc.htm}}: {{qq|There is no­thing bet­ter for a man than that he should eat and drink, and that he should make his soul en­joy good in his labour}}. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}But there is small joy in work within the work in­sti­tu­tion, for work is an en­forced means to earn­ing money; and how can the soul en­joy good in its labour when there is no soul in the places where labour is or­gan­ised? But these are big, if some­what odd thoughts, which have as yet no echo in the work in­sti­tu­tion, for to equate work with fel­low­ship, with love, with the liber­ated vital­ity of the art­ist of which {{w|Morris|William_Morris}}, {{w|Ruskin|John_Ruskin}}, [[Author:Peter Kropotkin|Kropot­kin]] and others speak, is to be met with the hid­den smile behind the po­lite hand, or with a psy­chi­at­ric diag­nosis. Once I at­tacked what is now called {{qq|work study}} in one of my books <ref>[[Author:James Gillespie|Gilles­pie]]: {{l|''Dy­namic Motion and Time Study''|http://explore.bl.uk/BLVU1:LSCOP-ALL:BLL01001424066}} (Paul Elek 1948)</ref> and quoted {{w|Plato}}. {{qq|What}}, a re­viewer of the Amer­ican edi­tion asked, {{qq|has<!-- 'Has' in original --> Plato to do with work?}} What indeed? | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}Yet there is joy in work when the task is a man{{s}} own; when he is not ant-<wbr>heaped in a mon­strous {{w|tall flat|Apartment}} which shrinks him to less than man-<wbr>size, but has a garden in which there is the poetry of ful­fill­ment<!-- as printed -->, {{qq|The Apple tree, the Sing­ing, and the Gold.}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}Or he makes a table, or she bakes a good cake, or sews a dress, or to­gether they raise a family{{dash}}why is there ful­fill­ment only in this work and not in the other? I have been told, {{qq|But that{{s}} dif­fer­ent; we {{p|12}}couldn{{t}} or­gan­ise pro­duc­tion that way}}. Why is it dif­fer­ent, and who is this {{qq|we}}? | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}What func­tion, if any, has work in the well-<wbr>being of the per­son­al­ity or, on the other hand, what re­la­tion­ship has work to life as a whole? Why is it, for ex­ample, that the cap­acity reg­u­larly to work is a dom­in­ant factor in indi­vidual norm­al­ity from the psy­chi­at­ric and the depth psy­cho­lo­gical points of view? Why too is work-<wbr>therapy an es­sen­tial treat­ment in neur­otic and psy­chotic ill­nesses where there is a with­drawal from real­ity? It is be­cause in free, mean­ing­ful work which calls for skill and de­ci­sion-<wbr>making there is at once a focus­sing of con­scious­ness on the world of real­ity and a pro­tec­tion against the back­ward group of un­con­scious fantasy and in­fant­il­ism. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}Work in which there is free ex­pres­sion of the whole man is an ego-<wbr>build­ing and sus­tain­ing func­tion of the self. The age of prim­it­ive in­no­cence, of the ''par­ti­ci­pa­tion mys­tique'' when men were yet in the mind­less state of one­ness with na­ture, was the {{w|Golden Age|Golden_Age}} spoken of in the great reli­gious tra­di­tions. In the Hindu epic, the {{l|Maha­barata|https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/maha/index.htm}}, there is a {{w|Krita|Satya_Yuga}} or Golden Age: {{qq|In that age no buy­ing or sell­ing went on, no ef­forts were made by man; the fruits of the earth were ob­tained by their mere wish; right­eous­ness and aban­don­ment of the world pre­vailed}}. The {{w|Greek|Ancient _Greece}} peas­ant poet {{w|Hesiod}} be­moans the pass­ing of the Golden Age in which men cared no­thing for toil and lived like gods and had no sor­row of heart. But of his own, the {{w|Iron Age|Iron_Age}}, Hesiod cries: {{qq|Dark is their plight. Toil and sor­row by day are theirs and by night the an­guish of death}}. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}Writing over 2,000 years past, the {{w|Chin­ese|Han_dynasty}} philo­sopher {{w|Chuang Tzu|Zhuang_Zhou}} {{w|de­scribes|Zhuangzi_(book)}} the {{w|Golden Age of Chaos|Hundun}}, of placid tran­quil­ity in which no work was done and there was no need for know­ledge. In {{l|Genesis|https://www.sacred-texts.com/bib/poly/gen.htm}}, man lived in a {{w|para­disal|Garden_of_Eden}}<!-- 'paradisial' in original --> Golden Age until with the ex­pres­sion of self-<wbr>con­scious­ness, of know­ledge of good and evil, the curse of work was placed upon hu­man­ity. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}Always, in the great tra­di­tions, the pain of work and the rise of self-<wbr>con­scious in­di­vidu­al­ity are twinned, and in other lan­guage the story is re­peated by modern {{w|anthro­po­lo­gists|Anthropology}} who have stud­ied prim­it­ive so­ciet­ies and tell of their loath­ing of work. Prim­it­ive man obeyed the call of the an­cient blood which would charm us away from the sore round of duties and ob­liga­tions to a state of prim­it­ive in­dol­ence in which per­son­al­ity dis­in­teg­rates and, as in the prim­it­ive, the wish sub­sti­tutes for the act, and fan­tasy sub­sti­tutes for dir­ec­ted thought. It is against this re­gres­sion, so well-<wbr>known to {{w|psy­cho­therap­ists|Psychoanalysis}}, that Freud and {{w|Jung|Carl_Jung}} warn us: | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}{{qq|Laying stress upon the im­port­ance of work has a greater ef­fect than any other tech­nique of real­ity liv­ing in the dir­ec­tion of bind­ing the indi­vidual to real­ity. The daily work of earn­ing a live­li­hood af­fords par­tic­u­lar satis­fac­tion when it has been se­lec­ted by free choice; i.e. when through sub­lim­a­tion it en­ables use to be made of ex­ist­ing in­clin­a­tions, of in­stinct­u­al im­pulses that have re­tained their strength, or are more in­tense than usual for con­sti­tu­tional reasons.}} (Freud, <ref>{{w|Freud|Sigmund_Freud}}: {{l|''Civil­iza­tion<!-- 'Civilisation' in original --> and its Dis­con­tents''|http://www.stephenhicks.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/FreudS-CIVILIZATION-AND-ITS-DISCONTENTS-text-final.pdf}} (Hogarth Press 1946)</ref>). | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{p|13}}{{tab}}Freud also stresses the psy­cho­lo­gical value of work in com­mun­ity. Jung has this to say: {{qq|The best liber­a­tion (from the grip of prim­it­ive and in­fant­ile fan­tasy) is through reg­u­lar work. Work, however, is sal­va­tion only when it is a free act and has no­thing in it of in­fant­ile com­pul­sion.}}<!-- end quotes omitted in original --> <ref>{{w|Jung|Carl_Jung}}: {{l|''Psy­cho­logy of the Un­con­scious''|http://explore.bl.uk/BLVU1:LSCOP-ALL:BLL01012148223}} (Kegan Paul 1944)</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}Work which is cre­at­ive and thought-<wbr>provok­ing is a bless­ing and a boon to grow­ing per­son­al­ity, but work in which there is no thought and no de­ci­sion-<wbr>making breeds in­fant­il­ism and is once ac­cursed for those who, like re­pet­it­ive {{w|psy­cho­paths|Psychopathy}}, are forced to do it, but mani­fold for those who en­force it and would re­duce another per­son to the level of in­stinct­ive beast or {{w|cata­leptic|Catalepsy}} stone. Men do not so much dis­like work as they dis­like their man­age­ment-<wbr>depend­ent status. They do not dis­like work as such, but mainly that work which calls for small skill and for re­pet­it­ive move­ment, the ef­fect of which, the Amer­ican so­cio­lo­gists {{w|Walker|Charles_Rumford_Walker}} and {{l|Guest|https://prabook.com/web/robert_henry.guest/406429}} show, is to re­duce in­ter­est in so­cial af­fairs, in sport, in reli­gion, and in out-<wbr>of-<wbr>work activ­it­ies gen­er­ally. <ref>{{w|Walker|Charles_Rumford_Walker}} and {{l|Guest|https://prabook.com/web/robert_henry.guest/406429}}: {{l|''The Man on the As­sem­bly Line''|http://explore.bl.uk/BLVU1:LSCOP-ALL:BLL01003835124}} (Harvard 1952)</ref> The im­port­ant aspect of this is that if a man{{s}} oc­cu­pa­tion is thought­less and skill-<wbr>less, or if he has no oc­cu­pa­tion, he will in­tro­vert and so re­treat from the call of so­cial, family and eco­nomic duties. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}This is the un­spoken fear of the many writ­ers on the prob­lem of leisure: that man, drugged by com­fort and dis­tracted by mass amuse­ments, will re­gress to a state of neur­otic de­pend­ence on the state, the man­agers, the amuse­ment cater­ers, and the com­put­er­isers:{{dash}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | <font size="2"> | ||
+ | :::: ''Here where brave lions roamed, the fatted sheep,'' | ||
+ | ::::: ''and poppies bloom where once the golden wheat.'' | ||
+ | </font> | ||
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[[Category:Labour and industry]] | [[Category:Labour and industry]] | ||
[[Category:Workers' control]] | [[Category:Workers' control]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Poetry]] | ||
[[Category:Articles]] | [[Category:Articles]] |
Revision as of 18:47, 26 March 2020
Towards
freedom
in work
In an electrical components factory we had trouble planning for smooth flow of components and balancing of operations. Output varied considerably from one operator to another. Monday’s output was some 25% lower than output on Thursday which was the closing day of the bonus week, and work discipline was only fair. After some study a group bonus system was designed and the outline, meaning and purpose of this was put to the group which was then left to discuss it among its members, (free group discussion). The girls agreed to have a trial and they were then invited to check the base times set per operation, (group participation in method). The system was introduced with the quick result that the group members so organised themselves that the flow of work was greatly improved, discipline improved as a result of internal group controls, and output increased by about 12% over that previously attained under the individual piecework system. (Here the group took over the local management function of internal work progressing and, more important, that of local man-
We use the social-
Tens of thousands of kind-
- Sweet Mary your production’s poor,
- Just dry your tears and go,
- For speed and greed are rated high,
- But love-for-others, no.
- Christ! Where’s the electrician?
- Our lamps are burning low!
- Sweet Mary your production’s poor,
The illustration given describes in simple form the group contract system in which the group shares work and the rewards of work, and has a share in decision-
Now, there is a school of apologist thought which suggests that responsible industrial democracy is at work when opposition takes place between trade unions and employers in collective bargaining [1]. This plausible theory has, it seems, considerable support at executive level within the trade unions, but it is really a kind of verbalism; for while free opposition is a characteristic of democracy, so also is dependence on individual citizen morale and the spread of individual decision-
However, this matter of our schizoid culture and of planning for everything but self-
Management: Management is a (socially necessary) activity expressed in the science and art of directing, organising and controlling material and human factors within the work institution with a view to effective and profitable results. (No-
Leadership: Leadership is a power activity in which the leader and the led identify internally with each other (a “we” feeling) and the leader uses his power in a manner which accords with the wishes and expressions of the led [4].
Management (apart from the situation when one man is both policy-
Boss-
By definition, management is boss-
A new definition of orthodox management is in order:
Management: Management is skilled power activity expressed in the direction, organisation and control of human and material factors with a view to effective, profitable results on behalf of the principals, public or private, with whom management tends to identify when carrying out the economic aims of their principals.
Management, though it has yet to be admitted in the literature, is a “Power may be defined as the capacity of an individual, or group of individuals, to modify the conduct of other individuals or groups in the manner which he (the power-
It is clear that management is a power activity, but what is not made clear in the literature is that the power is not given by those led as in leadership, but is granted to management by the economic formula which makes the power legal and is endowed by existing power holders within the business hierarchy. Thus management’s power at root is formal authority.
Authority does not depend only on the economic formula which gives it legal sanction; it depends on allegiance or formal loyalty from those over whom authority is wielded. The authority, as I have said, is legal, and to have legality is to win allegiance (but not identification) in the minds of the majority of people, given other things are equal.
Authority has small real power, but the prestige of the person holding authority is an important factor. “Even a nod from a person who is esteemed”, said Plutarch, “is of more force than a thousand arguments”. Wealth, status and technical skills are attributes which tend to increase the weight of authority, and it is on these that orthodox management must on the whole depend, if outright coercion is not to be the rule. But, to repeat, the gaining of formal allegiance through external identification with authority itself, or with this or that attribute of the person holding authority, is not leadership.
The experts, economic and psychological, who have had this point of view on leadership in work put to them have, without exception, hotly rejected it. This rejection is understandable in view of the hundreds of books and the many educational courses on management which have promoted, and still promote, the idea that orthodox management and leadership of human beings are in some mystical manner twin functions. But in our analysis of human leadership there is no rejection of management and the necessity for management; rather, there is advanced the idea that the management structure be designed to integrate the human leadership function with technological and commercial functions in a manner later to be described.
Management doctrine, as with other political and economic doctrines, serves to justify the holders of power and those of the group or class with which the power-
Some of the doctrinal assumptions are:
1. That leadership is a component of orthodox management activity. (This we have examined.)
2. That management is or can be a professional body with an ethical code independent of the code of the policy-3. That the orthodox management process and structure is the best possible and there is no reasonable alternative.
4. That the decision-
The matter of whether there is a reasonable alternative to orthodox management process and structure remains to be examined, but that decision-
It has been shown that management is a skilled power activity. Power is decision-
In his book Decision-making and Productivity, Professor Melman, as will later be shown, indicates factually how foolish is the management doctrine that the managers must manage, [7], as does Professor Likert in his New Patterns of Management [8]. But the change from centralised decision-
I like the philosopher Roger Bacon on the effect of power on man, (I will misquote slightly): “Man doeth like the ape, the higher he goeth the more he showeth his ass”. Power is of an encroaching nature, or, as the political scientist Michels put it:
“Every human power seeks to enlarge its prerogatives. He who has acquired power will almost always endeavour to consolidate and to extend it, to multiply the ramparts which defend his position, and to withdraw himself from the control of the masses”. [9]
Part of the management doctrine has to do with work, but, it should be said, the idea of work held by management is that held by the majority of people:
1. Work is effort applied for the material values which income from work will buy. (Economic theory.)
There is a corollary to this definition of work and this comprehends the notion of economic man:
1a. A whole man can wholly be bought for money and money incentives.
Many managers will rightly reject the corollary out of hand, but on the whole, judging in terms of economic techniques, the corollaryIf we compare other definitions of work with that given above we will find ourselves leaving the concealing smoke of economic work, and breathing a sweeter air:
2. Work is prayer; prayer is work. (St. Benedict).
3. I pray with the floor and the bench. (Hasidic Judaism).
4. Labour is the great reality of human life. In labour there is a truth of redemption and a truth of the constructive power of man. (Berdyaev).
5. Laying stress on the importance of work has a greater effect than any other technique of reality living. (Freud).
6. Work and love are the two chief components in the growth of mature personality in community. (Erich Fromm).
Although our stress is on the psychological value of work, as in Freud, Fromm and others, it would be pleasing if we had more room to develop a work philosophy and to quote the poets’ work visions, the fine work philosophy in the Hindu Bhagavat Gita (Gandhi’s Karma Yoga), Zen Buddhism, which somewhat parallels Benedictine work practice, Chinese <span data-html="true" class="plainlinks" title="Wikipedia: neo-
But there is small joy in work within the work institution, for work is an enforced means to earning money; and how can the soul enjoy good in its labour when there is no soul in the places where labour is organised? But these are big, if somewhat odd thoughts, which have as yet no echo in the work institution, for to equate work with fellowship, with love, with the liberated vitality of the artist of which Morris, Ruskin, Kropotkin and others speak, is to be met with the hidden smile behind the polite hand, or with a psychiatric diagnosis. Once I attacked what is now called “work study” in one of my books [10] and quoted Plato. “What”, a reviewer of the American edition asked, “has Plato to do with work?” What indeed?
Yet there is joy in work when the task is a man’s own; when he is not ant-
What function, if any, has work in the well-
Work in which there is free expression of the whole man is an ego-
Writing over 2,000 years past, the Chinese philosopher Chuang Tzu describes the Golden Age of Chaos, of placid tranquility in which no work was done and there was no need for knowledge. In Genesis, man lived in a paradisal Golden Age until with the expression of self-
Always, in the great traditions, the pain of work and the rise of self-
“Laying stress upon the importance of work has a greater effect than any other technique of reality living in the direction of binding the individual to reality. The daily work of earning a livelihood affords particular satisfaction when it has been selected by free choice; i.e. when through sublimation it enables use to be made of existing inclinations, of instinctual impulses that have retained their strength, or are more intense than usual for constitutional reasons.” (Freud, [11]).
Work which is creative and thought-
This is the unspoken fear of the many writers on the problem of leisure: that man, drugged by comfort and distracted by mass amusements, will regress to a state of neurotic dependence on the state, the managers, the amusement caterers, and the computerisers:—
- Here where brave lions roamed, the fatted sheep,
- and poppies bloom where once the golden wheat.
- Here where brave lions roamed, the fatted sheep,
- ↑ Clegg: A New Approach to Industrial Democracy (Blackwell 1960)
- ↑ Gillespie: Free Expression in Industry (Pilot Press 1948)
- ↑ Falk: The Business of Management (Penguin 1962)
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Lasswell & Kaplan: Power and Society (Routledge 1952)
- ↑ Russell: Power (W. W. Norton 1938)
- ↑ Tawney: Equality (Harcourt Brace 1931)
- ↑ Melman: Decision-Making and Productivity (Blackwell 1958)
- ↑ Likert: New Patterns of Management (McGraw-Hill 1961)
- ↑ Michels: Political Parties (Hearsts 1915)
- ↑ Gillespie: Dynamic Motion and Time Study (Paul Elek 1948)
- ↑ Freud: Civilization and its Discontents (Hogarth Press 1946)
- ↑ Jung: Psychology of the Unconscious (Kegan Paul 1944)
- ↑ Walker and Guest: The Man on the Assembly Line (Harvard 1952)