You should read it, as least as far as the second image—but the argument says you’re talking about legal fictions as if they were people. Here’s a random piece of real evidence.
the argument says you’re talking about legal fictions as if they were people
And what’s wrong with that?
Organizations and institutions share some characteristics with physical people and do not share others. For example, both organizations and people make decisions. Or, as was mentioned in this thread, respond to incentives.
I think that “having values” is one of those things which can be meaningfully said about both organizations and people. If you don’t believe so, can you offer your reasoning?
What could it mean for organizations to have values in a world of mergers and (profitable) bankruptcies? Unless you’re reducing it to the values of the people making decisions, or an internal game that constrains them, I don’t have the first clue what you believe.
You should read it, as least as far as the second image—but the argument says you’re talking about legal fictions as if they were people. Here’s a random piece of real evidence.
And what’s wrong with that?
Organizations and institutions share some characteristics with physical people and do not share others. For example, both organizations and people make decisions. Or, as was mentioned in this thread, respond to incentives.
I think that “having values” is one of those things which can be meaningfully said about both organizations and people. If you don’t believe so, can you offer your reasoning?
What could it mean for organizations to have values in a world of mergers and (profitable) bankruptcies? Unless you’re reducing it to the values of the people making decisions, or an internal game that constrains them, I don’t have the first clue what you believe.
If you want to point out that organizations are not eternal: they come into being, change, and then disappear—so do people.