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Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

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Anonymous heaviside said...

"And it is well recognized that modern bureaucracies tend to discourse-about, but never to eradicate, problems – it is as-if the abstract bureaucratic system somehow knew that its survival depended upon continually working-on, but never actually solving problems... Indeed, ‘problems’ seldom even get called problems nowadays, since problems imply the need and expectation for solutions; instead problems get called ‘issues’, a term which implies merely the need to ‘work-on’ them indefinitely. To talk in terms of solving problems is actually regarded as naïve and ‘simplistic’; even when, as a matter of empirical observation, these exact same problems were easily solved in the past, as a matter of record."

Ivor Catt in his book The Catt Concept makes the point that it's much better to work on an unsuccessful project, because those can continue on indefinitely. Politically speaking, this gives an advantage to ideologies that go against human nature or eternal truths since those can never achieve their gaols.

There is this paper on bureaucracy in science:

http://vixra.org/abs/0912.0042

The author has a few other papers on similar subjects.

Venkatesh Rao writes some interesting things about the nature of bureaucracies, like this:

http://www.ribbonfarm.com/2009/02/17/the-training-of-the-organization-man/

2 November 2013 at 04:36

Anonymous Glengarry said...

For what it's worth, I thought Medical Hypotheses was an extraordinary journal (or blog, since that's what I read), for the many intellectually provoking and very pertinent articles you wrote. My kindest thanks for that.

In addition to that, the whole affair about how your tenure there was cut short and the journal name was summarily moved to something entirely different, was probably my first close encounter with Cathedral mob (in-)justice; quite an enlightening experience in itself.

2 November 2013 at 10:24

Anonymous Wm Jas said...

Thank you. I found this article very helpful. It makes explicit several points which I had sensed vaguely before but had been unable to define as clearly as you have done.

Your conclusion -- that there can be zero tolerance for committee-driven bureaucracy (which of course entails zero tolerance for "democracy") -- is impossible for most moderns to accept, but it is surely the correct prescription.

5 November 2013 at 05:19

Blogger Guy Jean said...

Last thing I read about this topic was Mises' "Bureaucracy". I read your post as a necessary update to that book, which first alerted me to the mentality of bureacracies.

18 December 2022 at 14:46