The Fable Of Rational Systems

Why Organisations Explain Decisions Better Than They Make Them

Series: Habit, Language and Rationality

Key observations

  • Most institutional decisions are acts of self-protection and defensibility, not genuine judgment.
  • Organizations reward legibility, precedent, and procedural cleanliness over actual discernment and thoughtful decision-making.
  • Rationales for decisions are often constructed after the fact to justify choices already hardened by inertia, budget, or executive preference.
  • Metrics are frequently chosen for their stability and reportability, becoming a means to discipline reality rather than reflect it accurately.
  • Process formalizes institutional habits, making repetition harder to challenge and creating an illusion of order and reasoned judgment, while primarily offering protection.