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From: Owen Byrne <owen@permafrost.net>
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Subject: Re: NYTimes.com Article: Why We're So Nice: We're Wired to Cooperate
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Date: Tue, 23 Jul 2002 10:02:42 -0300
>
>
> The question then becomes, why is knowledge sharing such a difficult
> thing in organizations? Is it, perhaps, not as difficult as the
> grousers say? I mistrust the romantic, Rousseauian argument that man
> is basically good but society basically corrupt, and that the later
> stifles the natural altruistic impulses. After all, it's in society
> that we share, as well as hoard. Is it that we think of "The
> Organization" as a machine, and like the research subjects get less
> neurological pleasure from cooperating with it than we would if it
> were humanized? Or ...?
>
>
>
Well, IMNHO, its because companies do not reward knowledge sharers. When
time comes for evaluation, there isn't a line on the page saying "Helped
others to succeed with their projects." Sharing inevitably cuts into the
time for personal productive work, and generally shows up as a red flag
if your boss has a "management by exception"(1) style.
Owen
1. http://www.xrefer.com/entry/164669
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