A note about the historical background knowledge on MBA dissertation investigation practice
How does some basic background knowledge about (1) the
scientific revolution, (2) the age of enlightenment period and (3) the
industrial movement, and (4) Post-WWII philosophical thinking enable MBA
students to better comprehend the contemporary dissertation project
investigation practices? Could you offer a brief discussion of it?
Yes — that
historical/philosophical background helps MBA students read, design, and defend
contemporary dissertations more clearly and critically. Below is a concise,
structured discussion linking each period to practical dissertation practices
MBA students use today.
Direct
answer
·
Learning the Scientific Revolution, Enlightenment,
Industrial Revolution, and Post‑WWII philosophy gives MBA students the
intellectual tools to evaluate evidence, choose methodologies, justify
assumptions, and situate managerial problems in wider social and ethical
contexts.
1. Scientific
Revolution — methods and reproducibility
·
What it contributed: the rise of empirical observation,
hypothesis testing, the experimental method, and norms of reproducible
reporting in science.
·
Why it matters for dissertations: MBA students adopt the
same expectation that claims be supported by observable data, transparent
procedures, and reproducible analysis when designing empirical studies or
evaluating evidence. This underpins choices like operational definitions, data
collection protocols, and clear reporting of results.
2. Age
of Enlightenment — reason, critique, and public argument
·
What it contributed: emphasis on rational critique,
secular inquiry, individual rights, and broadening access to education and
debate (salons, print culture) that spread ideas and scrutiny.
·
Why it matters for dissertations: students learn to frame
research questions with logical argumentation, justify normative claims (e.g.,
about governance or ethics), and communicate findings to both specialist and
broader audiences — skills needed for literature reviews, theory-building, and
defending implications for practice and policy.
3. Industrial
Revolution — context, scale, and social consequences
·
What it contributed: large‑scale structural change, new
economic institutions, and social problems that motivated systematic social
inquiry and formation of disciplines like economics and sociology.
·
Why it matters for dissertations: many MBA topics (supply
chains, organizational change, labor, technology adoption) are shaped by
industrialization’s legacy; students must link micro choices to macro
structures, choose appropriate unit(s) of analysis, and consider externalities
and social impacts when proposing managerial interventions.
4. Post‑WWII
philosophical thinking — paradigms, reflexivity, and methodological pluralism
·
What it contributed: debates about positivism vs
interpretivism, the rise of critical theory, constructivism, and attention to
researcher reflexivity and value-ladenness after WWII.
·
Why it matters for dissertations: modern research methods
textbooks and examiners expect students to state their epistemological stance
(e.g., positivist, interpretivist, pragmatic), justify methodological choices
(quantitative, qualitative, mixed), and reflect on bias and ethical
implications — all shaped by Post‑WWII philosophical developments.
Practical
implications for MBA dissertation work
·
Framing research questions: use Enlightenment-style
critical reasoning to make questions logical, precise, and socially relevant.
·
Choosing methods: apply Scientific Revolution norms for
empirical rigor when using experiments or quantitative analysis, and Post‑WWII
pluralism when qualitative or mixed methods better fit the question.
·
Reporting and reproducibility: follow scientific
reporting norms — transparent methods, data handling, and limitations — to
allow replication or credible critique.
·
Situating contribution: connect micro findings to
industrial-era structural issues and modern societal concerns, and make
normative claims cautiously with ethical justification.
·
Reflexivity and ethics: acknowledge researcher position,
potential biases, and broader consequences — a Post‑WWII expectation for
responsible scholarship.
Illustration
(brief)
·
Example: a dissertation on digital gig‑work could (a)
adopt an empiric testable hypothesis about earnings effects (Scientific
Revolution), (b) argue why the question matters for worker rights and policy
(Enlightenment values), (c) analyse how platformization continues industrial-era
labor shifts (Industrial Revolution linkage), and (d) justify a mixed-methods
design and reflect on researcher stance and ethics (Post‑WWII pluralism).