DocumentCode
3447976
Title
Expertise and organizational developments: technological revolutions projected as bipolar “evolutionary vector” and “entropy distribution” continuum
Author
Zessner, Walter W.
Author_Institution
George Brown Coll., Toronto, Ont., Canada
fYear
1996
fDate
21-22 Jun 1996
Firstpage
288
Lastpage
297
Abstract
Despite, or perhaps because of, an immense expansion of pluralistic expert knowledge about organizational development, we lack an integrated and generic frame of orientation. Hence, the decline of once pioneering companies and the chaotic collapse of nation states defied prediction, including the spectacular cases of the East-European economies. Serious socio-economic upheavals are hardly preventable so long as they remain unforeseeable. This lack of analytical understanding presents a disturbing paradox for an era that is hyped as the information age, with unprecedented knowledge accumulation and inventive capacity. The paper considers how unpredicted massive failure or unsustainable development in ecological, economic, technological and other areas typically becomes a source of social stress, conflict and disorder that threatens civilized life
Keywords
commerce; information technology; socio-economic effects; ecology; entropy distribution; evolutionary vector; information age; organizational development; social stress; socio-economic issues; technological revolution; unsustainable development; Biological system modeling; Chaos; Economic forecasting; Educational institutions; Entropy; Information analysis; Navigation; Standards development; Standards organizations; Stress;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Technology and Society Technical Expertise and Public Decisions, 1996. Proceedings., 1996 International Symposium on
Conference_Location
Princeton, NJ
Print_ISBN
0-7803-3345-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISTAS.1996.541166
Filename
541166
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