An Essay on ‘Homo Projecticus’: Ontological Assumptions in the Projectified Society
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| Title: | An Essay on ‘Homo Projecticus’: Ontological Assumptions in the Projectified Society |
|---|---|
| Authors: | Jacobsson, Mattias, 1976, Söderholm, A. |
| Source: | International Journal of Project Management. 40(4):315-319 |
| Subject Terms: | Homo Projecticus, Ontology, Philosophy of science, Project management, Project studies, Behavioral research, Decision making, Administrative decision making, Decision makers, Decisions makings, Homo projecticu, Ontology's, Project study |
| Description: | This essay argues that as a consequence of the projectified society there is a need to consider the individual as inherently different from what rational and administrative decision-making ontologies suggest. ’Homo Projecticus’ is introduced as a new set of ontological assumptions, and the aim of this essay is to outline its characteristics and discuss its implications. In contrast to previous assumptions, we argue that the projectified society produces action seeking individuals who are guided by the notion that life is organized within multiple temporal contexts that both follow each other and exist in parallel. Thus, a key concern is how to create boundaries, or limits, in ways that enable action. Two key mechanisms are used: ‘time bracketing’ to define time limits, and ‘scope bracketing’ to define issues or tasks. Consequently, with an aim of completing tasks through appropriate actions, the rationality guiding decision-making and actions is ‘bounded by brackets’, which means that, in contrast to previous ontologies, the limits for rationality are created by the decision-makers themselves. Through bracketing, sensible segments are created, which enables action to be reached. |
| File Description: | |
| Access URL: | https://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-55266 |
| Database: | SwePub |
| Abstract: | This essay argues that as a consequence of the projectified society there is a need to consider the individual as inherently different from what rational and administrative decision-making ontologies suggest. ’Homo Projecticus’ is introduced as a new set of ontological assumptions, and the aim of this essay is to outline its characteristics and discuss its implications. In contrast to previous assumptions, we argue that the projectified society produces action seeking individuals who are guided by the notion that life is organized within multiple temporal contexts that both follow each other and exist in parallel. Thus, a key concern is how to create boundaries, or limits, in ways that enable action. Two key mechanisms are used: ‘time bracketing’ to define time limits, and ‘scope bracketing’ to define issues or tasks. Consequently, with an aim of completing tasks through appropriate actions, the rationality guiding decision-making and actions is ‘bounded by brackets’, which means that, in contrast to previous ontologies, the limits for rationality are created by the decision-makers themselves. Through bracketing, sensible segments are created, which enables action to be reached. |
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| ISSN: | 02637863 18734634 |
| DOI: | 10.1016/j.ijproman.2021.11.004 |
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