Abstract
This paper examines the inadequacy of managerial models to manage our world, especially in ethical matters. It starts by illustrating the reductionistic nature of these models. They gradually take the place of the real world in our minds and become a surrogate world. While this surrogate world seems to perform perfectly well, the real world is far out of control. Next the paper states that understanding and, therefore, models are timeless. The article explains how ancient misconceptions about change find their correspondence in modern misconceptions about ethical decisions. This is the culpabliss error. The author finally argues that the ethical relationships between a decision or action and its consequences must be dealt with in a cybernetic way.
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Beer, S. The culpabliss error: A calculus of ethics for a systemic world. Systems Practice 10, 365–380 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02557886
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02557886