Leadership and the Logic of Absurdity
探讨领导者明知影响有限却仍选择领导的现象,提出“荒谬逻辑”作为决策框架,分析其何时出现及为何能产生非凡领导力。
Leaders are often thought to meaningfully influence the performance of the organizations they lead. However, considerable research suggests that their impact on organizational performance might actually be minimal. These claims of leader irrelevance pose a puzzle: If leaders are relatively insignificant, why would someone commit to leading? Applying decision-making theory, I first consider justifying the decision to lead according to the logics of consequence and appropriateness—the two principal decision-making logics underlying previous work on the motivation to lead. I then present the logic of absurdity—a decision-making logic in which decision makers knowingly choose to dedicate themselves to an irrational course of action. In terms of the decision to lead, a decision maker employing the logic of absurdity acknowledges the likely futility of leading but decides to commit to it nonetheless. I conclude by considering when leaders are most likely to decide to lead according to the logic of absurdity and why doing so may result in leadership of exceptional originality, foolishness, intelligence, and madness.