Philosophy of Business
Philosophy of Business
Philosophy of Business
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in a pricing practice know as just price, and in the Enlightenment the dominant view of economic decision making was one of rationality. The formative years in the development of the modern philosophy of business and economics was the 17th and 18th century. At that time, thinkers like Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Shaftesbury, and Smith created the intellectual foundation upon which modern business and capitalism was built. A basic principle subsumed within business practice and economic theory alike is the notion of free will. Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau all accepted that we are free moral agents, able to make decisions, control our own destiny, and engage in a social contract. This notion would later be celebrated in the idea of the entrepreneur, someone that freely decides to pursue a risky venture in the hope of receiving great rewards. It is also at the core of utility theory, a model of consumer behaviour in economics in which consumers freely choose what to purchase. Another philosophic principle that would become part of business theory and practice is rationality. The general philosophic predilection of the enlightenment was that people were fundamentally rational. Philosophers such as Ren Descartes and Spinoza had built whole systems of thought on this assumption. Capitalism would do the same. For two hundred years economics was founded on the assumption of Homo economicus. This assumption has recently been challenged by Herbert Simon, among others. Another key philosophic assumption is atomism. It was John Locke's view of society as an aggregation of independent, autonomous individuals, rather than Jean-Jacques Rousseau's vision of society as an organic collective that would become an integral part of business philosophy. The key ethical unit is the individual. Social institutions are merely constructs that individuals can use for their own purposes. Many years later, Milton Friedman used this assumption in arguing that corporations have no moral responsibility because, he contended, they are not individuals capable of responding to moral claims. Only the individuals within the business enterprise have a moral responsibility. Modern business practice and theory developed in the age of scientific discovery, and this gave it a mechanistic orientation. In particular, Newton had just discovered classical physics. This would influence business and economics in ways that we are just beginning to understand. Early writers dealing with economic topics, such as Adam Smith, borrowed many of their techniques and terminology from classical physics. They would use terms like "equilibrium", "labour force", "elasticity", and "income accelerator". Today a few theorists are starting to question the mechanistic approach and model business on biological principles or chaos theory. Newton's law of inertia has found its way into marketing where it is claimed that consumers will continue in their current state unless they are encouraged to act otherwise. Thus advertising is claimed to perform the valuable role of helping people experience a more variegated and interesting life. John Locke also contributed an important attitude towards the private ownership of property. He claimed that individuals have certain inalienable, natural rights. One of these is the right of ownership. He said that if we toil on the land and mix our sweat with the soil, we become the rightful owners of the land. This argument was extended
to other assets including the factors of production, a conclusion that many, including Karl Marx, would challenge. Another key concept that underlies modern business is psychological egoism. This states that the core moral obligation is to oneself. Thomas Hobbes saw all action as motivated out of self-interest. A group of philosophers including Mandeville, Butler, Shaftsebury, Hutcheson, and Smith (sometimes referred to as the "enlightened selfinterest school") developed this into one of the core concepts of modern business theory. Bernard Mandeville claimed that private vices are actually public benefits. In The Fable of the Bees (1714) he laments that the "bees of social virtue are buzzing in mans bonnet". Civilized man has stigmatized his private appetites and the result is the retardation of the common good. Bishop Butler claimed that pursuing the public good was the best way of advancing one's own good since the two were necessarily identical. Lord Shaftesbury turned the convergence of public and private good around, claiming that acting in accordance with ones self interest will produce socially beneficial results. An underlying unifying force that Shaftesbury called the "Will of Nature" maintains equilibrium, congruency, and harmony. This force, if it is to operate freely, requires the individual pursuit of rational self-interest, and the preservation and advancement of the self. Francis Hutcheson also accepted this convergence between public and private interest, but he attributed the mechanism, not to rational self interest, but to personal intuition which he called a "moral sense". Adam Smith developed a version of this general principle in which six psychological motives combine in each individual to produce the common good. He called it the invisible hand. In The Theory of Moral Sentiments, vol II, page 316, he says: By acting according to the dictates of our moral faculties, we necessarily pursue the most effective means for promoting the happiness of mankind. Since Smith's time, the principle of the invisible hand has been further incorporated into economic theory. Leon Walras developed a four equation general equilibrium model which concludes that individual self interest operating in a competitive market place produce the unique conditions under which a society's total utility is maximized. Vilfredo Pareto used an edgeworth box contact line to illustrate a similar social optimality. A link can also be made between utilitarianism and the fundamental principles of the philosophy of business, however this is more theoretical that practical. Economists use utility theory to model human actions. Like Jeremy Bentham, modern economists assume that people are hedonists, that is they prefer more satisfaction to less satisfaction. The amount of satisfaction can be expressed in terms of the utility a person derives from the satisfaction. Social welfare functions used in modern welfare economics are an outgrowth of John Stuart Mill's utilitarian calculation of obtaining the greatest good for the greatest number. The grounding of business principles on teleological ethics has been challenged by many deontological philosophers. John Rawls' maxmin criterion also provides an alternative.
most universities, today, one would find precious few courses in the philosophy of business (as opposed to a growing number of business ethics or applied ethics courses). There are indications that a growing number of philosophers with formal training in academic philosophy will come to specialize in the philosophy of business. Perhaps the best known modern philosopher of business is Peter Drucker, whose publications have had a profound influence on management and organizational theory, generally, and on how we think of the business enterprise. More often than not, people who think about business issues are considering it from an applied perspective, which is to say, what is the best or most effective means of transacting commerce or managing the enterprise, with some goal in mind, usually profitability, improving employee relations, or marketing. While Drucker has dealt with these issues and many more in numerous publications over his long life, he also inquires into the principles and concepts that underlie commercial activity and organizational structure, and he asks what ought the mission of a business to be, and, in particular, how can we reconcile a business mission with conflicting interests in the marketplace and society. One of the most frequently discussed topics is the matter of organizational change in a complex environment. Paul R. Lawrence has dealt primarily with organizational change, organization design, and the relationship between the structural characteristics of complex organizations and the technical, market and other conditions of their immediate environment. His 1967 book, Organization and Environment (written with Professor Jay Lorsch), added contingency theory to the vocabulary of students of organizational behavior. Other philosophers of business, for example, Geoffrey Klempner, are principally interested in examining how business is even possible, which is to say, how can an enterprise function in society as a whole. Klempner states that theories of ethics and business are often at odds, and that one might even have to suspend the normal ethical considerations that would apply outside of business in order for a business to be possible. This is reminiscent of Albert Z. Carr's famous and controversial Harvard Business Review article on bluffing, where he said business was similar to playing poker, and that deception is a necessary part of business. Of course, there is a close relationship between the philosophy of business and business ethics. Philosophers specializing in business ethics are primarily interested in how business people ought to conduct themselves in the marketplace and in society. Philosopher Norman E. Bowie adopts Kant's three versions of the categorical imperative for ensuring ethical business conduct, and he pays particular attention to the third variation, whereby the people within a business must be seen as a kingdom of ends, and not merely treated as means to an end. The "invisible hand" is a favorite metaphor for practitioners of modern-day Western capitalism, the ideology driving globalization and, for the most part, business as we know it today. What many of the bottom-line fundamentalists may ignore is the degree to which the so-called "free market" has been skewed and maneuvered in ways Adam Smith never envisioned. Thus the question of ethics and conscience runs deeper yet. With exponential increases in government laws, regulations and court decisions regarding business in the past century, ethical practice has morphed from
doing "the right thing" as conscience would dictate to doing what complies with the law or isn't explicityly illegal. Thus there's been a gradual relaxation of internal moral compass and greater reliance on external parameters, as in "if it isn't illegal, it must be all right," as well as a new skillset in finding "legal loopholes" in stretching the boundaries of compliance.
Advocates of business contract theory believe that a business is a community of participants organized around a common purpose. These participants have legitimate interests in how the business is conducted and, therefore, they have legitimate rights over its affairs. Most contract theorists see the enterprise being run by employees and managers as a kind of representative democracy.
they assert that what really matters for assigning ownership is whether or not property was acquired or exchanged legally (see Robert Nozick), which is known as the historical entitlement theory, whereas Marxists assert that there are no property rights in the means of production. Libertarian socialists, sometimes known as left-anarchists, hold that, as Proudhon said, "Property is theft" that is, in reference to the ownership of productive resources, property is not the right to use, but the right to keep others from using. Advocates of this philosophy therefore hold the "institution of property", as they sometimes call it, to be immoral in itself, so the accumulation of wealth that includes productive resources, especially land, is also immoral. This means that no business can really be ethical, since the very foundation of business as we know it is private property.
the central social setting for our ancestors. In many ways, one's affiliation with a business is the most important social institution most of us have outside of the family.
develop business theories, organized explanations of the facts. To what extent is what we purport to be business knowledge...other than that which is relatively trivial...reliable or veridical? Business relies heavily on inductive reasoning, which assumes a uniformity of nature, such that the future is assumed to resemble the past. This, of course, is problematic, especially when considering the complexity involved in adequately factoring in the effects of customers, competitors, legislative and regulatory encumbrances, employees, environmental and climatic hazards, war, new technology, and so forth, into useful quantitative formulae. It is impossible to bind all of the variables for making probabilistic judgments on many of the most important business problems with a high degree of confidence. For this reason (among others)...because of the number of variables and the sheer unpredictability of outcomes...there is a rather considerable risk of failure in business; conversely, there would seem to be a rather high degree of luck in achieving success, or putting it in the vernacular, being at the right place at the right time. This relates to the simple fact that business knowledge is highly tentative, and subject to error or obsolescence. The philosopher of business might also reasonably ask, to what extent does intuition play a role in our business knowledge. What does it mean to have "a gut feeling" about a business matter, and how is it useful. Is there even such a thing as business intuition, or is it simply a matter of internalizing knowledge through a variety of experiences, such that it seems intuitive. At the very least, a great many managers and marketers would say that they operate using their intuition a great deal, perhaps especially in dealing with people, which, of course, leads us to inquire into the role of psychology.
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Drucker, P. (1954) The Practice of Management, HarperBusiness, Reissue edition 1993, ISBN 0-88730-613-6