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Dimock's philosophy of administration
Authors:Harold Seidman
Institution:Center for the Study of American Government , Johns Hopkins University , 20036, Washington, DC, 1619 Massachusetts Avenue N.W.
Abstract:Marshall E. Dimock was a self-confessed non-conformist who valued individualism and individual self-development above all other values. For him a philosophy of administration is more than a science or art and “must deal with institutional goals and objectives, with social values and individual growth, as well as with the paraphernalia of organizing and running things, which are only “incidental.”(1) He warned that “over specialization of the individual makes him dull and lacking capacities for administrative growth”(2)and decried the parochialism of behaviorists, logical positivists and other methodologists. At the core of his thinking about problems of administration, management and organization was what he regarded as the fundamental importance of “moral philosophy” although he recognized that “the political economist who epitomizes moral philosophy is regarded as a regrettably nonconformist and excessively individualistic relic of a past age.”(3)
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