Volume 2 Issue 1 (2006)
Editorial

Immaculateness and Research Practice

D. P. Dash
Xavier Institute of Management, Bhubaneswar 751013, INDIA
Héctor R. Ponce
Universidad de Santiago de Chile, Facultad de Administración y Economía, Av. L.B. O'Higgins 3363 Estación Central, Santiago, CHILE
Gerard de Zeeuw
Faculty of Business and Law, University of Lincoln, UK
Published March 2, 2006

Abstract

Notions of purity, perfection, or immaculateness have powered our imagination over the ages. Various images of perfection have held sway in their hallowed times, providing secure streams for channelling human energy. Unfortunately, with the unfolding of the human drama on the world stage, all the images of perfection have suffered damage, epoch on epoch. Different responses have emerged to attempt a restoration. Revival of some of the old images is one such response. Production of new images to serve as worthwhile anchors of value and meaning is another common response. For reasons possibly known only to philosophers and historians, the enterprise called modern science has got thickly embroiled in this civilisational process--first, as the culprit behind the decline of some of the established images, then as the producer of new images, and now, perhaps, as a constant reminder of the perpetual lack of purity and immaculateness in all things human.