1987
DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-5914.1987.tb00088.x
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The Theory of Bounded Rationality and The Problem of Legitimation

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1988
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Cited by 13 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Even after their appearance in awareness, values are partially ambiguous (i.e., open-ended), and since they are revealed over time they have a necessarily tacit status that goals do not (Martin et al, 1987). For example, what it means to be a good mother or father is always somewhat open; it is something one learns to be by doing.…”
Section: The Guidance Of Rules Ly Valuesmentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…Even after their appearance in awareness, values are partially ambiguous (i.e., open-ended), and since they are revealed over time they have a necessarily tacit status that goals do not (Martin et al, 1987). For example, what it means to be a good mother or father is always somewhat open; it is something one learns to be by doing.…”
Section: The Guidance Of Rules Ly Valuesmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Unlike goals which must be specifiable in advance if they are to serve as "stop conditions" for the rule-following processes involved in cognition and action, values are progressively revealed only in the activity of creation and discovety and are often unarticulated until after their emergence in the thought or action they assess (Martin, Kleindorfer, & Buchanan, I 986). Even after their appearance in awareness, values are partially ambiguous (i.e., open-ended), and since they are revealed over time they have a necessarily tacit status that goals do not (Martin et al, 1987). For example, what it means to be a good mother or father is always somewhat open; it is something one learns to be by doing.…”
Section: The Guidance Of Rules Ly Valuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Whether the difficulties are the result of certain matters of principle, or whether what is needed is more time and money, is a matter of continuing debate. We have our own views on the matter, and some of those have been published elsewhere (Kleindorfer & Martin, 1983;Martin & Kleindorfer, 1986;Martin, Kleindorfer, & Brashers;. It is not, however, the purpose of this paper to enter into that debate.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Our proposal is that instead of having either direct access or no access to that reality, the knower is an agent who possesses a real but tacit access to it. This access is constituted in terms of what we have called epistemic valuesvalues which the knower is, as an agent, responsible to realize (Kleindorfer and Martin, 1983;Martin, Kleindorfer, and Brashers, 1987;Martin, 1989). For example, the clashing valuesconsistency and completenesshave informed the debate we have staged between p and k .…”
Section: Reflections On the Above Antinomy And Its Resolution: Tmentioning
confidence: 99%