wisdom pyramid (Ackoff, 1989; Zeleny, 1987),
wisdom is an important goal of information systems. The IS field,
with its
interdisciplinary focus on the relationship between information
technologies and diverse individual, organizational, and societal
issues,
is well-positioned to advance wisdom computing research. Wisdom is
both an
end and a means in IS research. Wisdom is inextricably connected
with
knowledge, decision support, inquiry, inquiring systems
(Churchman, 1971),
inquiring organizations (Courtney, Haynes, and Paradice, 2005),
systems
thinking, business thinking (Mitroff, 1993), and learning
organizations
(Senge, 1990) among other topics of interest to IS researchers.
Transforming
data, information, and knowledge ultimately to wisdom is seen as a
necessary and critical goal by leading IS researchers past (e.g.,
Ackoff,
1989) and present. Transdisciplinary wisdom is a means to IS
research as
the diversity enriching IS goes further than the social sciences
and may
include the humanities as well (Kroeze, 2010; Kroeze et al.,
2011).
Historical, philosophical and linguistic fields are only three
humanities
disciplines that are relevant for IS.
While wisdom defies conventional definitions and there are many
theoretical
perspectives on the nature of wisdom, in a sense, wisdom is
concerned with
inquiry on what is of true value toward the individual and
collective good.
Wisdom arises in a person-context interaction but can also be
conceived in
terms of organizations, communities, and nations. According to
Sternberg's
balance theory (2003), wisdom is the application of intelligence,
creativity and knowledge for the common good by balancing
intrapersonal,
interpersonal and extrapersonal (institutional and other larger)
interests.
Wisdom has been related to cognitive, reflective, and affective
personality
characteristics including multiple perspectives and insight
(Ardelt, 2004)
and to self-actualization and beyond (Maslow, 1971).
This minitrack will provides a platform to reflect on
transdisciplinary
wisdom as an end and means of IS research through the application
of social
science and the humanities. Three main approaches are possible:
multidisciplinary, interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary.
Multidisciplinarity refers to the study of a phenomenon from
divergent
angles, with little or no integration. Interdisciplinarity
amalgamates two
or more perspectives, and transdisciplinarity is a holistic,
blended
approach transversing disciplinary limits (Van Biljon, 2011).
Potential themes/topics include but are not limited to the
following:
* Â Â Â Â Understanding wisdom as a goal for IS and its
operational
definitions and dimensions
* Â Â Â Â Exploring present and potential contributions of the
humanities
(Linguistics, History, Art, Philosophy, Theology, Law, etc.) to IS
* Â Â Â Â Reflecting on multi-, inter- and transdisciplinary
approaches in
IS theory and practice
* Â Â Â Â Reflections on bridging divisions between diverse
methodologies,
assumptions, and communities of practice in IS research
* Â Â Â Â Applications of diverse wisdom philosophic
perspectives (e.g.
Eastern, Western, African, Native American, etc.) to IS
* Â Â Â Â Reflections on the role of IS in producing, sharing,
impacting,
and supporting wisdom at the level of the individual,
organization,
community (real and virtual), society, culture, nation,
nation-bloc, and
globe
* Â Â Â Â Implications of wisdom computing research for IS as
a discipline
References:
Ackoff, R.L. (1989) From data to wisdom, Journal of Applied
Systems
Analysis, Vol. 16, pp.3-9.
Ardelt, M. (2004) Wisdom as expert knowledge system: A critical
review of
a contemporary operationalization of an ancient concept, Human
Development, Vol. 47, pp.257-285.
Churchman, C. West. (1971) The Design of Inquiring Systems: Basic
Concepts
of Systems and Organization, Basic Books, New York.
Courtney, J.F., Haynes, J. and Paradice, D.P. (2005) Inquiring
Organizations: Moving From Knowledge Management To Wisdom, IGI
Global.
Kroeze, J.H. (2010) The mutualistic relationship between
Information
Systems and the Humanities (full paper, edited version of
inaugural
lecture), Proceedings of the 15th International Business
Information
Management Association Conference (15th IBIMA), 6 - 7 November
2010,
Cairo, Egypt, pp. 915-927.
Kroeze, J.H., Lotriet, H.H., Mavetera, N., Pfaff, M.S., Postma,
D.J.V.R.,
Sewchurran, K. & Topi, H. (2011) ECIS 2010 panel report:
Humanities-enriched Information Systems, Communications of the
Association for Information Systems (CAIS), Vol. 28, No. 1,
Article 24,
pp.373-392. Available:
http://aisel.aisnet.org/cais/vol28/iss1/24
and
http://uir.unisa.ac.za/handle/10500/4651
Maslow, A.H. (1971) Chpt 3, Self-actualizing and beyond, in The
farther
reaches of human nature, Penguin Compass, New York.
Mitroff, I. and Linstone, H.A., The Unbounded Mind: Breaking the
Chains of
Traditional Business Thinking, Oxford Univ. Press, New York, 1993.
Sternberg, Robert J. (2003) Wisdom, Intelligence, and Creativity
Synthesized, Cambridge University Press, New York.
Van Biljon, J. (2011) A critical review on the reporting of
surveys in
transdisciplinary research: A case study in Information Systems,
The
Journal for Transdisciplinary Research in Southern Africa, Vol. 7,
Issue
2, pp. 337-350. Available:
http://search.sabinet.co.za/WebZ/Authorize?sessionid=0&next=ej/ej_content_transd.html&bad=error/authofail.html
Wenger, E., McDermott, R., & Snyder, W.M. (2002) Cultivating
communities
of practice: A guide to managing knowledge. Boston: Harvard
Business
School Press.
Zeleny, M. (1987) Management support systems: towards integrated
knowledge
management, Human Systems Management, Vol. 7, No. 1 pp. 59-70.
Mini-track chairs:
Nik Dalal
Oklahoma State University
Stillwater, OK 74078
nik@okstate.edu
(405) 744-8618
Jan H. Kroeze
University of South Africa
Muckleneuk, Pretoria, 0002, South Africa
kroezjh@unisa.ac.za
+27-12-429-6976
Submission Procedure:
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Important Dates
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submissions
March 1, 2012: (11:59 PM Pacific time zone): Deadline for paper
submissions
April 6, 20012: Authors will be notified of acceptances on or
about
this date
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camera ready copy due