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Late one afternoon in the fall of 1976, we were sipping Sanka and
speculating on the possible directions towards which research and
theory in organizational science might lead. One of us had just
re-read Walter Nord's Marxist critique of Human Resource
Management, and the discussion evolved into an enumeration of the
many articles that had appeared in the recent literature attacking
the discipline, its mission, and its methods. In no time the list
was long enough to suggest that a number of scholars, both young
and established, were dissatisfied with the rate of progress begin
made in the accumulation of knowledge about organizations. The
critics we identified were located at many different schools, and
they were associated with diverse research traditions and biases.
The causes they identified as underlying the problems they cited
varied, as did the solutions they offered. We decided to pursue
these polemics with a view to seeking com monalities among them,
hoping that if there were any dominant common themes, it might be
possible to anticipate the directions the field could take. Our
reading and thinking led us to the conclusion that many of the
issues being raised by the critics of the discipline could be seen
as disagreements over some implicit (or ignored) metaphysical and
epistemological assumptions about organizations. We hypothesized
that much of the controversy resulted from a lack of consensus
regarding what organizations are and how knowledge about them can
be developed."
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