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Producing things or production flows? Ontological assumptions in the thinking of managers and professionals in construction

Rooke, JA; Koskela, LJ; Seymour, D

Authors

JA Rooke

LJ Koskela

D Seymour



Abstract

New approaches to production management can be conceptualized as treating production as flow rather than transformation. These alternatives can in turn be regarded as reflecting opposing ontological positions, holding respectively that reality is constituted of temporal process, or atemporal substance. The new production philosophy thus arguably represents a process ontology radically different from the atemporal metaphysics underlying conventional methods and theories. Moreover, research in physics education has identified the disjunction between ontological categories of 'substance' and 'process' as a particularly acute barrier to understanding process phenomena. Studies are presented which demonstrate the possibility of specifying and classifying mental models, with regard to two important management solutions in construction. Thus, procedures typically adopted in Quantity Surveying and the implementation of Structural Engineering Design are examined. Methods of measurement used in Quantity Surveying are designed to account primarily for physical, rather than temporal properties. In design, the emphasis is on representing properties of finished structures, rather than the construction processes. The process is then managed by treating the design and its execution as separate products. It is argued here that alternative, more effective management solutions are derived from a process ontology.

Citation

Rooke, J., Koskela, L., & Seymour, D. (2007). Producing things or production flows? Ontological assumptions in the thinking of managers and professionals in construction. Construction Management and Economics, 25(10), 1077-1085. https://doi.org/10.1080/01446190701598665

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Oct 1, 2007
Deposit Date Nov 26, 2009
Publicly Available Date Nov 26, 2009
Journal Construction Management and Economics
Print ISSN 0144-6193
Publisher Routledge
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 25
Issue 10
Pages 1077-1085
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/01446190701598665
Keywords Decision making; indexicality; learning; lean construction; management theory; metaphysics; ontological categories
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01446190701598665

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