Kierkegaard and Leadership Theory, a Radical Reappraisal

Business Ethics Journal Review 5 (1):1-6 (2017)
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Abstract

Storsletten and Jakobsen (2015) try to integrate the instrumental, responsible, and spiritual positions in leadership studies with Kierkegaard’s aesthetic, ethical, and religious modes of existence. Their combination of leadership theory and Kierkegaardian thought, however, seems deeply problematic. In particular, the instrumental-aesthetic and responsible-ethical connections appear weak or at least significantly underdeveloped, and the spiritual-religious connection seems logically inconsistent.

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Abe Zakhem
Seton Hall University

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