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Altered states of consciousness: Creative alternatives in decision making

Planning Review

ISSN: 0094-064X

Article publication date: 1 April 1975

95

Abstract

Are hunches, intuition, and extrasensory perception valid methods for making business decisions? The reasonable answer is no. Our intellectual and cultural history dictates a rational, thoroughly examined, and logically analyzed approach to problem solving. But there are hints that the traditional approaches to decision‐making are being modified, and that subliminally generated material is not only helpful, but can be a creative and successful way of approaching the multi‐faceted complexity of contemporary planning. In 1964 and 1966, for example, Dun's Review printed articles that dealt sympathetically, even admiringly, with business planners who relied upon intuition or other mysterious forms of foreknowledge to make decisions. In November/December 1969 IBM's journal Think published an article on how executives use intuition in decision‐making. They concluded that “hunches may be almost as important as data. Have subjectivism and the counter‐culture philosophy of anti‐rationalism caught up with American business institutions? Does this presage a revolution in executive decision‐making? Most importantly: are there alternative ways of making decisions utilizing obscure but powerful creative abilities within the unconscious mind?

Citation

Van Over, R. (1975), "Altered states of consciousness: Creative alternatives in decision making", Planning Review, Vol. 3 No. 4, pp. 24-26. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb053727

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1975, MCB UP Limited

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