Revista de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales
© 2022. Universidad del Zulia
ISSN 1012-1587/ ISSNe: 2477-9385
Depósito legal pp. 198402ZU45
Portada: Dándole
Artista: Rodrigo Pirela
Medidas: 25 x 30 cm
Técnica: Acrílico sobre tela
Año: 2012
Año 38, Especial No.29 (2022): 14-20
ISSN 1012-1587/ISSNe: 2477-9385
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7498568
Revista de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales. FEC-LUZ
EDITORIAL
The contexts of uncertainty: VUCA environments or BANI
environments? Towards a social science
episteme
I would like to refer in this opportunity to the problem of
uncertainty that is increasingly gaining ground in the epistemological
status of the social sciences. In particular, one of the aspects of the
epistemology of management sciences or organizational management, as
it may be called, stands out. This is BANI environments, as the issue of
uncertainty at the level of the activities of organizations or governmental
institutions is now called, which replaces, in a theoretical sense, but also
in the sense of the praxis of management, the concept of VUCA
environments, also referring to the same concept of uncertainty, but from
other epistemic spheres for its consideration, since it is observed that as
society faces the great challenges of nature that changes at the speed that
marks the tachometer of the organicity of institutional and organizational
life, it is clear that the elements that constitute these critical moments,
experienced by society, must be addressed in order to successfully face
the uncertainty that is transformed into a voluptuous act by negative
within organizations and society itself.
Beyond the origin of the terms, which I leave to the readers and
researchers to freely choose to investigate and specify, the central
question I want to highlight is whether we are going through, as a
civilization, the moments described conceptually by these two types of
linguistic creations through their acronyms in the English language.
Regardless of their meaning, I would like to emphasize that both terms
refer to extreme situations of uncertainty, since the environment in which
institutions develop has, as a characteristic, to be covered with nodules or
observation points through which to deploy appreciations or scrutinizing
glances towards social reality, and from there to organizations in
particular, together with the environment that surrounds them, a matter
that most of the time is appreciated in a diffuse way. And it is precisely
there where the detail of this whole issue lies, discussed to satiety in the
social sciences, especially as part of the elements of uncertainty that
human action brings with it.
With regard to VUCA environments, it can be said that its
application dates back to the beginning of the Cold War, since it was
generated, from the very beginning, as a consequence of the uncertainty
produced by the ideological confrontation of the two most powerful
military blocs in the world, after the end of World War II. This brought
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about a hostile environment for global diplomacy that put civilization
itself on edge a few years after the end of that conflagration. The 1962
missile crisis was the culmination of previous episodes of mutual threats
and skirmishes between the blocs, based precisely on the possession of
weapons of mass destruction through the use of nuclear technology,
tested to satiety by both sides in the icy conflict. I believe that humanity
was on the verge of extinction at that time, had it not been for the skill
and cunning of the great men involved in that episode (I refer the reader
to the History of World War II and the Cold War).
VUCA environments, whose application dates back to the period
mentioned in the previous paragraph, are characterized by providing
organizations with strategies to overcome the crisis situation due to the
uncertainty of the environments surrounding them. There are four
elements: volatility, uncertainty, complexity and ambiguity. However, it
must be said that the systems that are described and operate in a world of
uncertainties, were already described by philosophy in general since
classical antiquity (Heraclitus wrote passages with his doctrine of war and
that of change; see in Sandoval, 2018), and by the theories of complexity,
which especially, modernly stands out from the epistemology of
complexity of Morin (2005), in addition to the system theory (Bertalanfy
and Luhman are the reference; see in Martínez-Miguélez, 2005). In this
sense, interpreting the fundamental elements of reality, described by the
aforementioned philosophy, it can be seen that unstable systems, which
by definition are complex, like all systems, tend to transform themselves
as a product of their own energy and that of the environment; but also to
disappear, as a consequence of the volatility of their parts, especially
those that do not resist the onslaught of the environment in which they
operate.
The example that we cite in this special point of reflection, comes
from our childhood memory, when we had fun in the backyard of the
house with brothers and friends, some of these already gone from this
earthly world and others of whom I no longer have news, and others of
whom we received pleasant impressions for their achievements; But of
whose moments of all of them come to us pleasant memories of that
distant time full of happy moments, like for example, playing with objects
and toys of little elaboration, others of great work for their confection,
but in general, all with which we obtained great moments of amusement.
I remember the game of the spinning top, which is a piece of wood
turned in the shape of a quasi-cone with a solid structure and a hard
metal tip. This was played by winding a rope from its thinner end to the
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thicker side, and it was thrown upwards with the thin end to then pull the
rope, which allowed a spin up and down, thereby printing great spinning
speed (torque speed, as this momentum is called in physics), which
occurred physically in its metal tip.
Well, this type of movement constitutes a temporal system, in
which, of course, the child is part of it, given his intervention to initiate
the movement; but also, in his spinning, the spinning top can be hindered
by the action of the same child that set it spinning (or of another child, to
prevent its opponent from winning). In this way, a system is constituted
that we could call a finite system under threat, since its existence in time is
not only short, but minimal, as such a system, due to the threats of
untimely interruption. In this sense, the spinning top as a finite system is
threatened by an environment that is volatile, since we do not know what
circumstance during its spinning may force it to break the equilibrium
that sustains it "dancing" with the same force with which it was launched.
The spinning top is threatened by the volatility of the environment
formed by the players and the environment, the uncertainty of its
duration as a system, the complexity that constitutes it (a solid piece of
wood, a metal tip, a long rope, the action of rolling it up and throwing it
into the spin, the surface where it spins, the children around it, etc.), but
also the ambiguity of its movement (caused by the back and forth
produced by the spinning speed, the obstacles of the surface, its initial
torque, etc.).
This system of the spinning top, finite by definition, will stop at
some point, since the friction of the surface will make it slow down until
it stops. Therefore, it is also made up of a structure whose composition
has all the complexity to be such a finite system, but not before
possessing a certain characteristic as a system: the uncertainty of its
permanence as a system, since it will disintegrate as a whole when it stops
definitively, ceasing to be a system as such: its existence is uncertain and
finite, although its duration is not known (the strategy consisted precisely
in giving it more torque so that it could remain much longer; my brother,
a year younger, was always better than me in this game). And this is what
also defines its complexity as a system, so that interpreting when it
becomes a system, going from a mere static object to a finite dynamic
object, allows us to determine it as an uncertain but fun object (the fun
consists in giving it enough force for its longer temporal duration). The
spinning top is a system as threatened by VUCA environments, or BANI,
depending on how you look at it.
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Like the spinning top, the forces of an organization's environment
operate in such a way as to introduce elements of uncertainty in general
in order to carry out its business turn. It receives energy from its
founders and partners to start its spin, with an environment that turns
into a threat every time the energy that feeds it is interrupted. And we
increasingly have environments shaped by greater uncertainty; hence, the
change of descriptive nomenclature of the reality of organizations and
complex systems (all systems are complex but shaped by singularities that
are themselves complex) (HAWKING, 2022a; Morin, 2005). Affected by
the VUCA environments, volatile in the ontological sense, society is
experiencing in its structures, as sustainers of the gregarious sense, the
disintegration of its elements in such a way that they make it change from
volatile environments to brittle, fragmented environments, so much so,
that it is possible to pass from one state, as described, to another state of
greater instability, a matter described through the BANI environments.
The latter ones represent an element that the sciences of
organizations are looking at to solve the great problems generated by the
circumstances of excessive volatility of complex systems in this era of
technoscience, coronavirus and warlike confrontation. That is to say, of
excessive uncertainty, since all these definitions are rooted in the
uncertainty that covers human actions and the uncertainties of knowledge
about the physical and human reality that compose it. Environments are
no longer volatile; rather, the reality of the environment within which
they unfold is, rather, of a weak nature; that is to say, so lacking in
strength that they break at the slightest jolt of energy received from their
external context. Hence, this momentum is defined as "brittle" (brittle, which
is the word that begins the respective acronym with its initial letter). But
in addition to brittle, organizational systems today are described in
another level of uncertainty, caused by personal elements of those who
are at the head of the business or organizational turn.
Therefore, organizations and society as a whole as a system are
not only covered by external energy, but also by internal forces that
sustain the system thus formed, being also of vital importance the
personal elements translated into motivational ones; these, i.e. the
personal elements, are those who have under their responsibility and
direction or turn, in a general sense, the materiality and energy of the
organization. Ontologically, we thus see a system that is made up of
external energy and internal energy; or, as we stated at the time
(Villalobos, 2010), every organization, and every system, is made up of an
internal context and an external context, mediated by an element that
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transports energy in the two senses mentioned, this element being of a
human or personal nature; this serves as a communicating vessel of the
energy from which the organizational system is nourished. Well, if this
vector element enters into psychological states that are not favorable to
the social or organizational turn, the system enters into decline, and may
even disappear as a system, transforming itself into a new one, or
integrating its parts into another system, or simply disappear.
This is the central point of this editorial; that is, the elements that
make up the states of uncertainty in any social organization and that are
defined under the acronyms mentioned above. As in the game of the
spinning top of our childhood, the finite systems that we form with the
aspiration that their duration be prolonged in time, are affected by
energies foreign to their systems, which, always, will tend to separate,
dissect, fragment, even stop them, both from the physical point of view,
as well as from the psychic point of view. From the psychological or
personal point of view, the systems can enter into mental barriers of its
directors, managers or leaders, which put it under threat, and from the
physical point of view, enter into breakage of its ontological structure
formed by the materials of which it is made and of the energy that moves
it. For this reason, VUCA environments transitioned to BANI
environments.
The anxiety provoked by the state of uncertainty by which the
system entity is threatened is due precisely to the perception of
destruction or disappearance that hangs over its head like the Sword of
Damocles, since the ups and downs provoked by the reductions and
increases of the energy that feeds it resent its reproductive system, thus
causing the worst crisis that the system thus formed can face. BANI
environments are the highest level of uncertainty that organizational and
social systems can face. The 21st century has been an era of energetic
storms in the social and organizational world, threatening their existence.
For the above reasons, from an epistemological perspective, the
scientific positivism with which we persist in knowing the elements of
these systems, not only continues to become obsolete, but also becomes
an epistemic impediment, since the dynamics that shape the systems do
not correspond to the ontological and epistemological conception on
which positivism is based. Its logic is linear and, therefore, it is not
possible to know its elements in depth in order to do organizational
science.
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Positivism as an epistemic paradigm is still not very useful to
know the physical reality of social phenomena, much less to know the
psychic reality of human nature. The logic of this epistemic method is
based on non-dynamic reality, so that its consequences as a science will
give us unhelpful results to understand and explain the phenomena that
occur around the energies that feed the systems (although often these
results may be contradictory to the very reality it explains). The
singularities that physics defines only occur in the understanding that
they persist as systems, a question that applies to everything that exists in
the Universe (Hawking, 2022b). An organization or any social system is
never a singularity, so that pretending to study it with a linear logic we
will be destined to epistemological failure.
The VUCA and BANI environments are a living example to
organizations and society of the chaos and uncertainty that physics
describes as characteristic of the phenomena of the Universe. These
environments turned into epistemological apparatus are the proof that
positivism does not make much congruence with the definitions they
embody; both are marked by uncertainty, although defined or
characterized in different ways. These, being complex phenomena, and
corresponding to the explanations given about organizational and social
systems, merit a complex and systemic approach, since the threats to
their duration in time are also complex and systemic. As in our childhood
game, organizations and society are threatened by the energies that make
up their systems, only that, unlike the spinning top, in society and
organizations, our life is passing, because in them and through them we
transit ephemerally.
Dr. José Vicente Villalobos-Antúnez / Editor-in-Chief
ORCID: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3406-5000
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REFERENCES
HAWKING, Stephen (2022a). Brevísima historia del tiempo. Editorial
Crítica, Barcelona (España).
HAWKING, Stephen (2022b). El universo en una cáscara de nuez.
Editorial Crítica, Barcelona (España).
MARTÍNEZ-MIGUÉLEZ, Miguel (2005). El paradigma emergente.
Hacia una nueva teoría de la racionalidad científica. Editorial
Trillas, México. D.F. (México).
MORIN, Edgar (2005). Introducción al pensamiento complejo.
Editorial Gedisa, Barcelona (España)
MCINTIRE, Alasdair. (1984). Tras la virtud. Editorial Crítica, Madrid
(España).
SANDOVAL, Carlos (2018). 20 filósofos visitan su empresa. Penguin
Random House Grupo Editorial, Santiago (Chile).
.
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Revista de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales
Año 38, Especial N° 29 (2022)
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