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    6thInternational Critical Management Studies Conference,University of Warwick, UK, July 13-15, 2009

    Stream 10- Whats cr itical about in formation systems?

    Michel Henry and Critical Theory, an Introductory Standpoint

    The case of virtual organization

    Eric FaSandra Le Guyader

    OCE Research CentreEMLYON Business School23 av. Guy de Collongue

    69130 Ecully CedexFrance

    Tel: 33 4 78 33 77 38Fax: 33 4 78 33 79 28

    [email protected]

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    Michel Henry and Critical Theory, an Introductory Standpoint

    The case of virtual organization

    Eric FaSandra Le Guyader

    OCE Research CentreEMLYON Business School23 av. Guy de Collongue

    69130 Ecully CedexFrance

    Tel: 33 4 78 33 77 38

    Fax: 33 4 78 33 79 [email protected]

    The question we wish to deal with in this paper is: how can Henrys phenomenology, based

    on a totally renewed way of understanding human being, a Self finding its dynamic in the

    immanence of its affective life, help us introduce a renewed critical approach toward modern

    e-conomy and the virtual organizations of human labour it structures? Relying on Michel

    Henry, the difficulties will in fact not only appear as difficulties to relate to the life-world, to

    interpret, to socialize, to exercise power, to face abstraction, but they will appear as the

    hindrance of ones praxis, its real, active, individual, subjective and intersubjective life. To

    support this argument we shall be studying those of Henrys works which will enable us to

    ground our critical analysis. This enables a critical and phenomenological perspective on IT

    reference paradigms whereby exchanges are reduced to information (Simon) and

    communication (Wiener) such as they operate in the virtual organisations of Davidow,

    Malone, Davenport, Handy, etc. Written by one of us who has been a participant observer

    during six months in a global company, a reflexive narrative is the starting point for

    introducing several insights related to the experienced hindrance of ones life dynamism and

    energy. This critical approach leads to a political theory of potentialization and capacitation

    which is close to Hilary Putnams intuitions.

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    Michel Henry and Critical Theory, an Introductory Standpoint

    The case of virtual organization

    Introduction

    Since Taylor, the theories of the scientific organization of human labour have continuously

    developed, based on calculating technologies, an abstract modelling of activity, information

    processing and communication technologies. H. Simon and J. G. March (1958) saw the

    organization as a co-ordinated group of information processing systems (human,

    organizational or computer). For many reasons, one of which being the identification with the

    system they develop, many researchers end up identifying human beings with an Information

    or Communication System. The most notorious illustrations of this are Norberts Wiener view

    of the equivalence between human beings and cybernetic devices in terms of communication,

    and Herbert Simons claim of knowing the Information System called Man. Since Dreyfus,Winograd, Gabriel (1999), to quote but a few, it has been argued that such an Information

    System called Man, a purposeful rational actor, is disembodied, has no affect, and lives in no

    context.

    The tragedy of this is that this extremely limited way of conceiving human beings has become

    a widespread way of organizing work, reducing it to mere information processing or

    communication. A striking example of this is given in the organizational concept of virtual

    organization where remote information processing is emphasized, to the detriment of

    embodiment. Etighoffer (1992), Davidow and Malone (1992), Handy (1995), Davenport and

    Pearlson (1998) to name but a few, argued that with the Internet, organizations can be

    reconfigured, that the virtual organization, with its heavy reliance on information technology, is

    conducive to collaborative remote working and can reduce transaction costs and red tape

    for companies by outsourcing many of their activities. This is all part of the globalization

    movement that brings with is a new set of rules for the global economy. Some fifteen years

    after it was launched, this idea has become an actual form of organization in a number of

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    companies. Yet despite the well-known and well-documented difficulties of peoples

    experiences of virtual organization, the concept shows no signs of being phased out. We now

    hear of virtual teams, virtual worlds, virtual learning environments, and so on and so forth.

    Nonetheless, several researches have seen the virtual organization in accordance with the

    tradition of critical theory. Let us first address the questions of power and politics. Jackson,

    Gharavi and Klobas (2006), from a Foucaldian perspective, found that the totality of the

    modes of power relations operating upon virtual knowledge workers comprises a complex,

    sophisticated web of integrated and overlapping control and constraints emanating from the

    external and internal panopticon. Kim Thorne (2005, 2007) drawing on Gerlaach and

    Hamilton, (2000) unravels the utopia of virtuality which masks a collusion between neo-liberal

    and post-modern thought. Nevertheless, Sioufi and Greenhill (2007) suggested, from a

    Marxist perspective, that utilizing ICT to enable cross-boundary work may subsequently bring

    with it heightened levels of contested power and elements of disrupted context. Moreover,

    they argue, it may also enable or even perpetuate existing discriminatory barriers between

    workers. Pursiainen, (2008) referring to the work of Foucault and Merleau-Ponty, underlines

    that such power over our body or from our body informs our cyborg style.

    Another way of developing a critical perspective is to point out the primacy of abstraction in

    the modern world. This raises the question of sense-making in contexts shaped by

    abstraction. Going back to lived experience, Zuboff (1988) points out the epistemological

    crisis generated by large-scale computerization whereby clerks are plunged into a world

    where bodily and spatial intelligence are reduced or sometimes eliminated in favor of

    logical competency (2008: 194). Boland (1991) argues in favour of face-to-face encounters

    in order to grasp the meaning of information by placing it in a wider context of experience.

    Dejours (2000) points out the suffering resulting from the growing discrepancy between

    abstract prescriptions and the reality of work. Kagand and Chumer (2007) suggest drawing

    on pragmatist philosophy, symbolic interactionism and phenomenology to illustrate how

    human beings make sense and derive their identities, through interactions with others and

    objects, in a life-world pervaded by technology. Isomki (2008) studies how the designers of

    information systems or infrastructures view the human beings for whom they are designing

    as non-human phenomena or in terms of functional software. This points us to the ways

    work may be moulded by software or by technological networks in such a context.

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    Disconnection from the life-world is also a theme of critical approaches. Carsten Stahl (2008)

    asks what the becoming future of rationality is in todays technological world. Drawing on

    Habermas, he provides valuable insights which prompts one to ask the following crucial

    question: do these technologies expand a collective and shared life-world; or alternatively, do

    they lead to confusion by creating diverging life-worlds? Besson (2008), drawing on Schutz

    and Luckmans structures of the life-world asks similar questions but in a different direction.

    He very helpfully raises the practical and moral issues of working through over-extended

    zones of operation and points to Borgmanns notion of focal practices. Jin & Robey (2008)

    applied Giddens' concept of time-space distanciation to a case study of a virtual company.

    Their paper explores the tensions between disembedded abstractions and livedorganizational experience

    Disembodiment and isolation are underlined from several critical perspectives which raise the

    key question of collaboration and cooperation. Referring to lived experience, Zuboff (1988)

    identifies the huge suffering generated by large-scale computerization in which workers are

    exiled from the interpersonal world of office routines expelled from the managerial world of

    acting-with (1988: 125). Referring to Merleau-Ponty and his focus on the body as the very

    locus and power to enact a shared world, Mingers (2001) argues in favor of the necessity of

    embodying information systems, that is to say, organizing face to face encounters to get co-

    operation and collaboration when organizing and deciding. I Introna and Brigham, (2008)

    referring to Levinas, indicate the difficulty of creating communities in the age of virtuality. Kim

    Thorne (2005, 2007) describes a virtual consciousness afraid of physical relationships

    The iron cage of the rational, hierarchical, authoritarian organization, representative of the

    previous physicalized era of industrial capitalism, is replaced by the new, benign, boundary-less, flexible, networked, information and communication technology-driven, empowering,

    virtual organization This virtual consciousness involves an on-going fear of physical

    relationships and an exaltation of technology as a replacement for human involvement in the

    world (2007: 1-2)

    Thorne criticizes the fiction of trust in virtual organizations and thus highlights, after Sennett

    (1998), the adverse implications for cyborg employees facing perpetual organizational re-

    design: the difficulty to build mutual loyalties and ultimately to reach the sustainable self.

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    We now reach the core ontological critical standpoint arguing that the self is itself in danger in

    such virtual organization of human work. Following Heidegger, Fa has shown (1999) that

    purposeful information processing could be a serious obstacle to the very power of whatHeidegger calls Difference: the move that puts in a novel and intimate way, the being, a

    world and an object. Basden (2003) argued that if we follow Habermas I.T. should be

    developed and used only on a small-scale basis, in and for the lifeworld. But he suggests a

    novel approach following the philosopher Dooyeweerd. According to this perspective, IT

    development and use should be treated as lifeworld, and norms should be grounded on a

    broader concept than lifeworld, modal aspectwhich is the very possibility of being, becoming,

    acting, ruling. Mutch (2002) advocates through critical realism the necessity to reintroduce

    the body, its affects and beyond those, the ontological emergent properties which arise.

    The aim of this paper is to introduce the subjective experience of life as described in Henrys

    phenomenology of life as a foundational standpoint for a critical theory. Similar to Basden

    and Mutchs attempts, the question we wish to deal with in this paper is: how can Henrys

    phenomenology, based on a totally renewed way of understanding human being, a Self

    finding its dynamic in the immanence of its affective life, help us introduce a novel critical

    approach toward modern e-conomy and the virtual organizations of human labour it

    structures? The difficulties will in fact not only appear as lived difficulties to enact a world, to

    interpret, to socialize, to exercise power, to face abstraction, but they will appear as the

    hindrance of ones real subjective life, its energy, dynamic and praxis . Our argument will

    begin by pointing out the key advantages of virtual organizations according to mainstream

    management theories. We shall then show how those modern theories of organization are

    the legacy of European science as analysed by Husserl in The Crisis of European Sciencesand Transcendental Phenomenology(1936).We will then illustrate the difficulties created by

    virtual organisation through a reflexive narrative written by one of the authors being a

    participant observer during six months in a MNC. In the second part, we shall then attempt to

    show, with Cartesian Meditations (1931)how such a form of organization that combines a co-

    presence in real time, via the Internet, the telephone, and remote or electronic encounters

    paradoxically only serves to reinforce an experience of absence. We will then ask the

    following questions: what is the scope of this just like world, from a Husserlian point of

    view? To what extent is the life of consciousness jeopardized? We shall then explore this

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    idea further by referring to the works of Michel Henry, and in particular, his discovery of

    pathic phenomenality. To do so we shall be studying those of Henrys works which will

    enable us to ground our critical analysis of virtual organisations and in particular his Marx. A

    Philosophy of Human Being (1983), the original title of which, in French - Marx I. Unephilosophie de la ralit (1976), illustrates an essential question: to what extent is virtuality

    the opposite of reality? How does it obstruct subjective life? By drawing upon Henrys La

    Barbarie (1987)we will show how the virtual organisation hinders the essential subjective

    energy and dynamic of living and living together. To conclude, we shall explain the

    pathogenic nature of this type of organization by situating it in the broader context of

    globalization and then advocate for a political theory of potentialisation and capacitation of

    subjective life close to Hilary Putnams intuitions and similar to some Marcusian views.

    I Fist approach of virtual organization, genealogy and phenomenological

    perspective

    Virtual organisation: a genealogical critique

    From a managerial perspective, the concept of the virtual company enables companies to be

    present across the globe and reduce costs by replacing physical premises with virtual offices.

    Communication networks and control technologies increase both the interdependence and

    the independence of the various far-flung companies. The company thereby becomes if the

    advocates of such a system are to be believed more flexible, more agile, and able to keep

    up with changing technologies and markets (Nagel, Preiss, Goldman, 1995). This in turn

    results in a change in capitalism whereby income is optimised through information

    technology, by creating a more disparate structure, increasing the flows of information, and

    by moving from a pyramid-type organisation to a network organisation. The unity of time and

    place is replaced by synchronous or asynchronous work carried out at disparate locations.

    Members of virtual teams communicate via electronic networks and often never meet face-to-

    face.

    Moreover, according to the advocates of virtual work, real value-added is not only a result of

    production within the company, but of the deployment of the resources outside the company

    and co-ordinated via an electronic network. They claim that what we are witnessing is a

    transition from an organisational form of capitalism based on the accumulation of capital to a

    network capitalism based on the control of information flows (Lash and Urry, 1987). Such a

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    form of organisation is designed to give the disparate teams and individual workers greater

    autonomy: this transition, we are told, brings with it another change, that of freeing the

    worker from the constraints of traditional subordinate-superior hierarchy and affording instead

    an autonomous, entrepreneurial status, consisting merely of a contractual relationship withthe company. In many ways, this seems to fulfil the aspirations of todays professional

    (Sennett, 1998). However, the worker has to contend with the pressure of deadlines, and

    monitoring processes made all the more rigorous by technology. He spends most of his time

    either behind a computer screen dealing with imitations of reality or on the telephone. In the

    paradigm of virtual organisation, face-to-face contact is reduced to a bare minimum.

    Yet this development is not merely the result of technological and economic logic; we suggest

    that it is considered acceptable and desirable because it is the height of Western rationality

    as analysed and criticised by Husserl in 1936 in The Crisis of European Sciences and

    Transcendental Phenomenology. Husserl traces, back to Galileo, the emergence of a

    theoretical logical praxis disconnected from the feeling body, disconnected from our bodily

    (leiblich - literally living body: leib is related to leben, life) way of living (1936: 59, parenthesis

    added). Let us clarify these terms and their implications. According to Husserl, Immediately

    with Galileo, then, begins the surreptitious substitution of idealized nature for pre-scientifically

    intuited nature. (1936: 58). Knowledge is no longer bound to the uniqueness of situations,

    but sees the world through a prism of idealised forms and geometric models. The real world,

    the everyday life-world which we perceive subjectively through the senses is substituted by a

    geometric and mathematical world which isperceived as the life-world. Now, the world of real

    life is dressed up in a garb of symbols of the symbolic mathematical theories (1936: 60).

    Consequently, the act of knowledge is no longer aimed at the world of real life but at the

    pursuit of geometric shapes and mathematical formulae; thus the development of knowledge

    is effectively the pursuit of perfection embodied in pure geometric shapes (or Limit-shapes).

    This theory of knowledge consequently gives rise to a theory of action. Instead of the real

    praxis one concerned with empirical reality, we are now faced with an ideal praxis, of pure

    thinking which remains exclusively within the realm of pure Limit-shapes (1936: 30-31).

    Knowing the mathematical equation of these limit-shapes and models allows us to calculate,

    and thus to predict: if one has the formulae, one already possesses, in advance, the

    practically desired prediction (1936: 50). Thanks to this anticipation, the action can be carriedinto real life. Here, the perfection of the action is justified by the exactness of the calculation.

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    Thus, as Husserl points out, with this new praxis we attain what is denied us in empirical

    praxis: exactness(1936: 31).

    This idea in the Krisis illustrates very clearly the dynamic of the modern way of seeing,thinking and acting that drove the minds behind the scientific organisation of work and of

    virtual organisations. Their intentional consciousness is based on pure Limit-shapes,

    through the reproduction and the exactness of their calculations they can prescribe the

    optimal organisational forms. These types of organisation are accepted when they promise,

    backed up by abstract economic models, the best economic and social performance.

    A few of the character istics of work ing in a vi rtual organisation

    The concept of the virtual company is the product of the praxis of people who have organised

    human labour according to an ideal pattern of disparate organisation, and is objectified in the

    work of teams who experience a tension between an abstract idea of work and their actual

    experience of he reality of their work. Valued for the contribution of his neurones, his grey

    matter, real man at work is caught up in an idealist model of the organisation. To illustrate

    this idea, we shall now describe a few characteristics of the virtual organisation as one of us

    researched doing a six months participatory observation in a company with branches in

    several different countries: the head office was in France, and sites in the USA and Canada.Weekly conference calls were held to discuss the various difficulties that could arise in a

    project for harmonising rules and procedures in relation with the implementation of an ERP.

    Throughout the project managed by this virtual team, in order to keep down travel

    expenses, most contact was made via email or over the telephone. The participant observer

    was trained at Henrys phenomenology and Lacanian anthropology when she wrote down.

    Most of the time, these telephone conferences were difficult, in a very insidious way,

    both for the project leader and for the local teams. In the analysis of these difficulties,

    I will take my own point of view, as a managed person in the team and observer of

    the situation, and the point of view of the managed team members in the US and

    Canada. I spent some time in Canada with the teams, which helped me understand

    their side of the project.

    Its very difficult to express the reality of a situation or a relationship with tools. It wasas if we were working whilst wearing blinkers, without taking into account the context

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    of what was said or communicated. It was very, often impossible to understand

    exactly what was happening: There was communication in that information was

    passed on but no real speech. These difficulties were further compounded by the

    language barrier, which was particularly evident in humour. I used to say to myself:why are they laughing are they laughing at us? And they must have been wondering

    why we werent laughing?

    My manager and I found it difficult to listen to what others were feeling; we tended to

    objectify the other team members who were on the other end of the phone. This

    inevitably raised an insidious aggressiveness between the head office and the

    subsidiaries. And yet, nothing was actually said, everything was felt and supposed

    and the people concerned didnt know how to talk about this situation. As a result, I

    came to dread these weekly conference calls. I didnt even dare ask any questions

    when I didnt understand for fear of looking stupid or incompetent. The frustration

    grew. The we never emerged. No unity was found, but differences were opposed.

    No link of confidence was formed, which made cooperation in the daily tasks of the

    project very difficult, and costly emotionally speaking.

    We got the impression the North American teams thought we didnt listen to their

    point of view. Yet when the project co-ordinator asked their opinion, they werent

    forthcoming and said that she was the project manager, that it was her decision and

    theyd go along with whatever she decided. Instead of setting deadlines, she asked

    them what they could manage. It was a vicious circle. The Americans must have

    thought that we were only pretending to be open-minded, and remained defensive

    and then made out we didnt listen to them. It was very difficult for everyone

    Throughout the project the team was virtual .

    This narrative shows a possible way of thinking reflexively about virtual organization for

    someone trained at Henrys phenomenology and Lacanian anthropology. It also shows us

    what an insidious ordeal working in a virtual team can be. In the just like, fake presence,

    people are faced with incomprehension and a withdrawal of the other, almost to the point of

    absence. Husserl and Michel Henrys phenomenology will give us a better understanding of

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    the problems this absence of the other insidiously creates when technology creates a virtual

    just like presence.

    II Phenomenological analysis and critique

    Transcendence and the vir tual organisation

    With the help of Husserls Cartesian Meditations we will conduct an initial analysis of working

    in such a virtual organisation. In the virtual organisation subjects talk to each other and

    discuss objects or situations that they imagine in their world. But given the distance and the

    fact that all communication takes place over the telephone or the Internet, it is not possible to

    take into account the context or experience of the other teams. Thus, in the virtual

    organisation, there can be no real sharing of experience, no opening of horizons. Becausedistant situations are only perceived through figures or representations, because people

    communicate with people who have no face and no history, intentionality cannot fulfil its

    intuitions of the perception of the other and its situations. Despite the fact that a single

    language workplace English is used, paradoxically, these people cannot see what these

    representations represent. Consequently, what emerges from the virtual organisation is a

    sense of inability to associate the representations and information exchanged with realities:

    It was very, often impossible to understand exactly what was happening.And yet Husserl

    says in Cartesian Meditations: Only an uncovering of the horizon of experience ultimately

    clarifies the actuality and the transcendency of the world (1931: 62). The novelty of

    the virtual organisation is the uncertainty about the horizon which makes intelligible the

    representations exchanged and, consequently, the intentional consciousness inability to be

    freed from doubt. It is now the phenomenological representation of the reality of experience

    that requires confirmation and verification that is lacking But we do know also,, that we

    can be sure something is actual only by virtue of a synthesis of evident verification, which

    presents rightful or true actuality itself (1931: 59-60).

    "With these tools it is very difficult to grasp the reality of a situation" reports the participant

    observer. This reality, which comes from the synthesis of evident verifications achieved by

    conscious perception, this reality is lacking in the virtual organisation. As Husserl writes it is

    evidence alone by virtue of which an actually existing, true, rightly object or whatever

    form or kind has sense for us (1931: 60). More because it is the fact that it is conscious

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    life alone, wherein everything transcendent becomes constituted (1931: 62), the Husserlian

    pochenables us to notice that the virtual organisation, by no longer allowing it to realise its

    intuitions that lend meaning, attacks the life of consciousness. This is because the principle

    of manifestation, the principle of appearing, is failing that reality is lacking. By attacking thelife of consciousness, the virtual organisation attacks the very essence of appearance that

    we can call the real (by distinguishing the real from the realities of which it is made up). But

    what is disturbing about the virtual organisation is that this undermining of the real, this

    stifling of the life of consciousness occurs, paradoxically, in the real time of the presence

    published by communication networks. The virtual organisation stops realities from being

    created, and creates an absence whilst the just like of presence is organised. Encounter is

    thus derisory (Fa, 2009). But why is it that this is perceived as such an ordeal? There must

    be, inside the phenomenality we have just seen fail another phenomenality that allows

    people to experience it as an ordeal. So what is this phenomenality?

    Grounding the criti cal approach in the immanence of life

    In order to answer this question, we must extend our phenomenological thinking where

    virtuality and reality are concerned. We will therefore look to Michel Henrys Marx. A

    Philosophy of Human Being (1963, tr. 1973) which centres on the theme of reality. With the

    help of Michel Henry we will show that the virtual organisation undermines more than the

    objective substance of reality and the life of consciousness. Indeed, Michel Henry reverses

    the very notion of transcendence into one of immanence. In Marx, A Philosophy of Human

    Being, Henry displays this reversal through a rather original interpretation of Marx based in

    particular on the German Ideology, a posthumously published work of Marx ignored by the

    Marxist tradition. In the German IdeologyMarx defines the real as the real, living individual:

    The premises from which we begin are not arbitrary ones, not dogmas, but real premises

    from which abstraction can only be made in the imagination. They are the real individuals,

    their activity and the material conditions under which they live. This idea is, for Marx, not

    arbitrary or incidental but central and fundamental. Henry stresses that Marx tried incessantly

    to define reality by revealing its essence: Defining reality is central to Marx thinking: it is his

    one only preoccupation, in other words, his great obsession.(1976: 280).

    Henry thus shows rather shrewdly that Marxs notion of reality evolves from the idea of an

    ideal genre or universality (in line with Hegel) to a sensitive object (according to Feuerbach),to action (in his theory on Feuerbarch). Marx then divides the concept of action as on the one

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    hand, the production of an objectivity, the intuition of real action, and actual real actionwhich

    acts not as a seeing but a doing and the immanent, radically subjective experience of this

    doing.(1976: 369). This radical change from the transcendence of the genre or sensitive

    object to the immanence of acting subjectivity, occurred when Marx, in his quest for reality,refuted Hegels position regarding action. With Hegel, the essence of action is producing the

    object that objectifies subjectivity and, by objectifying it, manifests it (1976: 335). Marx

    maintains that there is another way in which subjectivity can manifest itself to itself by pointing

    that the praxis is subjective, and wears itself out in its inner experience of itself, in the

    radically immanent feeling of effort with which it confuses itself. (1976: 347-348). This

    means, contrary to what Hegel believed, that subjectivity does not need to be perceived by

    consciousness, through the process of objectification, to be so; that, on the contrary, it lies in

    the immanent experience of its own effort. This experience of subjectivity precedes activity of

    representing itself: Posing does not make the subject, but the subjectivity of objective

    essential forces. (1976: 350).

    The essence of reality lies not in the intuition of consciousness, in objectivity - as an obvious

    composition of the objects of the world but in the ordeal of subjectivity acting by itself,

    without any discrepancy between doing and subjectivity Action is real insofar as it is

    subjective, (1976: 370). What is deemed real is that which has this capacity to feel its praxis

    in the immediateness of a presence of oneself to oneself. This reversal of the notion of reality

    leads to an identical reversal to the notion of material and substantial that is quite distinct from

    materialistic and idealistic philosophies: material is linked to the praxis, that is to say the

    actual life of individuals, their activity and needs, the originary subjectivity which makes up

    their substantial existence.(1976: 408). It is therefore in this other phenomenality, in the

    appearance of a real, immanent, material, living and acting Self that is grounded the critical

    standpoint, and that the difficulty of not understanding others in a virtual working organisation

    manifests itself. And therefore that appears, through the experience of hindered living Self,

    the metaphor of wearing blinkers the feeling described as not grasping reality, not

    understanding.

    Phenomenality of subjectivity and intersubjectivity

    Henry therefore concurred with and rediscovered Marx who thus defined reality after

    establishing a phenomenality that was different from that in which subjects perceive objectsremotely from themselves. This other phenomenality is that which comes from experience: in

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    this phenomenality there is no distance between the subject and the object, the subject

    experiences its praxis in the immediateness of a presence of oneself to oneself. It cannot

    escape from what it experiences and what is the very object of its perception. In 1963 Henry,

    in The Essence of Manifestation, exposed the duplicity of appearance. One dimension ofappearance, in relation to distant objects the visible comes through intentionality, as

    Husserl says, or through a difference from a horizon, as described by Heidegger. Yet Henry,

    by highlighting the duplicity of appearance, showed that based on affectivity, (which becomes

    a transcendental Affectivity), there is another type of phenomenality that precedes the

    phenomenality of the world and makes it possible: self-affection, the experience of the self by

    the self. I is thus the permanence of the affection of subjectivity itself. This self-affection,

    which is subjective life, owes nothing to society or the world: it is life or, more precisely, the

    experience of a singular life by itself. This very self-affection, in which the subject experiences

    itself, experiences its ipseity, is what enables it to say I experience myself, I live, I am, I

    can. Here, stresses Henry, the pathos is substantial, material Pathos [] refers to the

    phenomenological matter [] in which experiencing everything oneself finds its concrete,

    phenomenological realisation (2004).In Incarnation, une philosophie de la chair -

    Embodiment, a philosophy of the flesh- (2000),Henry further explored the material dimension

    of this pathos by calling it flesh, and by drawing a clear distinction between it and the

    organic body. Our flesh is affective, pathic. Henry later precised the link between life,

    affectivity and Self:

    In the immanence of its own pathos, this reality of life is then not any life whatsoever. It is

    everything except what contemporary thought will turn it into, that is, some impersonal,

    anonymous, blind, mute essence. In itself, the reality of life bears necessarily this Self

    generated in its pathetic self-generation, this Self which reveals itself only in Life as the

    proper self-revelation of this Life that is, as its Logos (1999: 353)

    It is thus possible, by turning transcendence into immanence, to highlight another version of

    the violence inherent in the virtual organisation. When the just like presence is organised, at

    the key moment of the joint organisation of action, due to the distance, the technological-

    assisted nature of the communication, and the language barrier, the worker can not only no

    longer understand what is happening, but, more importantly, can no longer be affected, in his

    flesh, by the Other who is affected being on the receiving end of his action. Is the lack of face-

    to-face contact the reason for this loss? According to Lvinas, seeing the others face calls for

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    responsibility towards the other, who is perceived as vulnerable : On the contrary in this type

    of organisation, where there is no face-to-face encounter, there is no means to avoid

    treating others like objects, human relations are in danger to be destroyed. Yet this

    interpretation does not emphasise strongly enough the basis of a human organisation whichis lost in the virtual organisation.

    The face-to-face contact so desperately missing is indeed a fundamental aspect of any

    encounter. It is not merely a case of seeing the other persons face: it is not just about having

    an objectivising image, in the light of day: beautiful ugly, etc of the others organic body. Its

    about as the popular saying goes putting a face to a name, literally. For the name is the

    image of nothing in the world, it indicates the singularity of an actingsubjectivity. Without a

    name, the other can be reduced to merely a representative of a category: man, woman or

    child, an unknown being. But the others face, not in its mere form but through the affectivity

    of flesh that brings it to life, its expressions allow one to experience, through the

    manifestations of the affective life of the person encountered (joy, sadness, anger, etc), the

    manifestation of life itself. It is therefore not seeing that gives access to intersubjectivity, but

    the ability to experience, based on the self-affection of life as a transcendental affectivity: It is

    not a type of noematic presentation, nor a noetic that is the basic foundation for access to the

    other; its a donation consisting in transcendental affectivity writes Michel Henry (1990 a:

    155).

    This is why, as far as Henry is concerned, an intersubjectivity that is not born of a sharing of

    the same world is part of a sharing by acting subjectivities. By sharing, with effort (this sharing

    is a co-pathos, or suffering with), the affects of acting subjectivity, we share our common

    condition of living: The Being with is a doing together and relies on it. Just like the

    intersubjective being finds its essence in the praxis (1976, II: 119). Here we experience the

    originary community of living beings. It is for this reason that, by obstructing encounters, the

    virtual organisation of human labour not only prevents one from grasping the objective reality

    of situations in the life of an intentional consciousness, as we saw with Husserl, but also

    prevents the affective life and cuts off the affective, pathic link with other living and acting

    subjectivities; in other words, it cuts one off from the ties of affective life, which are the ties

    where the originary community of livings is manifested. Thus isolated, the acting subjectivities

    close in on their selfishness, as Marx and later Henry have shown us. The subject is not

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    aware of this loss yet it feels it in the suffering of difficult relationships. No longer able to

    experience the ties of intersubjectivity, he withdraws into himself and treats other people like

    objects. Thus, on the one hand, the participant observer and her manager found it difficult to

    sympathise with the problems experienced by others, whilst on the other hand, they: tendedto objectify the other team members who were on the other end of the phone .

    Paradoxically, the virtual organisation obstructs even the essence of any organisation, that

    is to say, the emergence of an order based on the unity of differences. It is necessary to point

    out here that all this occurs in the just like of a presence, which lends such encounters an

    element of violence which, paradoxically, attacks subjective and affective life and its

    dynamism: the manifestation of the originary community of livings and consequently the

    development of intersubjectivity.

    Transitions of acting subjectivit y and virtual organisation

    We saw with Husserl that the virtual organisation hampered the life of consciousness. We

    then explored this theme further with Henry and discovered that the virtual organisation

    obstructed, in quite another way, the dynamism of acting, affective subjectivities. Indeed, for

    Henry, there is an affective life that is totally separate from the life of consciousness. It was,

    after all, Henry who, in The Essence of Manifestation established that living means

    experiencing oneself, and, going against the majority of Western philosophy, focused on thecentral presence of the theme of subjective immanent life in Marx: Marx called the radical

    immanence of this subjectivity which now represents reality for him, life. (1976: 370). This

    subjective life has a particular power of phenomenalisation that is quite different from

    consciousness but is the basis of it, argues Henry, stressing, like Marx, that representation,

    seeing are based on the praxis It is not consciousness that determines life but life that

    determines consciousness. (1976: 401). Should thediscontents of forms of civilisation then

    be interpreted in the light of life: There is a discontent in a civilisation whenever the energy

    of life is wasted, (1987: 181). It is therefore in the dynamism of ones actual life, perceived as

    a subjective, affective, acting life, that, primarily, the experienced, and rather trying

    pathogenic aspect of the virtual organisation is manifested. Let us now explore certain

    inherent aspects of this energy of subjective life so that we may then explain exactly how it is

    hindered by the virtual organisation. The synthesis of evident verifications in Husserls

    intentional phenomenology, eliminate once and for all any traces of doubt about the object.

    But what, in Henrys phenomenology, are the transitions undergone by and in the living,

    subjective life?

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    These transitions are linked to the ties between the living and the praxis, between knowledge

    and life that is its very subjectivity, its anxiety, its suffering which precedes and is the

    basis of all knowledge, all consciousness and all thought" (1976: 413). Having establishedthe importance of these ties, Marx and later Henry were able to point out the perversion that

    arises when men substitute for real practice effective determinants in other words, the life

    that is within him and his needs, his own consciousness the ideal relationship they have

    with ideal representations. (1976: 394). Desensitised to the prescriptions of life in their

    affective flesh, men withdraw into a transcendental ego enslaved, in the phenomenality of the

    visible, by its representations (and images). This leads to barbarity, as the dynamism of living

    subjectivity is unused, or becomes lead astray from its own prescriptions. We should

    emphasise here that the consequence of the perversion of a living and acting subjectivity

    does not lie in the perversion of work but fundamentally affects the ties between the living and

    itself. What the Self feels in this malaiseis, essentially, a loss of confidence in life and in itself.

    For the immanent knowledge of what occurs outside representations is precisely confidence,

    assured belief. On the contrary this transition will be the changing from loss of confidence to

    confidence regained.

    Let us illustrate the extent of such a regenerating act with an example. In order to escape

    from the uneasiness created by the virtual organisation, workers find salvation in humour. Yet

    this only increases the feeling of uneasiness. How can we show this? Humour, in its wittiest

    form, can be seen as the act of a living subjectivity who, when experiencing certain

    difficulties, is revived by the energy of life and, moreover, utters a witticism in its

    consciousness.Such a regenerating act is on no way an act of will: it simply comes to him, it

    was beyond his control, all he did was consent to it; he sees it as a gift. At the end of Patrice

    Lecontes film Ridicule, two aristocrats one French, one English, are walking along the cliffs

    of Dover while the Revolution rages on in France. The French aristocrats hate is blown out to

    sea by a gust of wind. The English aristocrat makes the following witty observation: Better to

    lose your hat than lose your head. This humour is about the difficulty of the relationship with

    objects, or with losing objects. There is nothing aggressive about this kind of humour; there is

    none of the violence of derision which is an attack on the subject (Fa, 2008). Freud (1905)

    notes that humour gives rise to a transformation from an unpleasant affect into a pleasant

    affect and illustrates that this arises in us.

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    In our particular case, humour could be the gesture that saves the living from being

    overwhelmed by the difficulties caused by the virtual organisation.But unfortunately, this

    attempt failed, as we have seen: because of the various obstacles mentioned earlier,compounded by the language barrier, it was impossible for the North American and French

    teams to share a joke: I used to say to myself: why are they laughing are they laughing at

    us?Consequently, these separate, distant living beings cannot share humour, one of the

    regenerating act of life that could bring then together; thus it is difficult to regain their

    confidence in life in such trying working conditions. If anything, the opposite happens: humour

    is seen as potential mockery and only aggravates the atmosphere of mistrust between the

    teams. Thus the individual is caught up in the system of visible and unreal representations.

    As Henry points out, the regenerating act of life is seen as a division of the concept of

    subjectivity (1976: 409), a division between the subject and the imaginary representations

    that invade ones consciousness and the opening to the praxis of subjective life, to the

    original subjectivity that means the radical immanence of life (1976: 409). This opening will

    enable one to feel differently, see differently, and produce other ideas. We could describe this

    as de-centring(of the ego focused on these representations) and re-centringon the living,

    acting subjectivity. To illustrate this regenerative dynamic of de-centring-re-centring, let us

    examine the example a foreigners joy in meeting someone despite the limited exchange of

    words. What does this tell us? In such a face-to-face encounter, affective subjectvities are

    aware of the difficulties of language and culture barriers, and yet, amid these limited

    exchanges of their representations of the world, the people feel, in their flesh, the strength of

    this mutual desire to connect, demonstrated by the often considerable effort made by one

    party to communicate with the other. Of course, hypocrisy can be used to hide a desire to

    deceive, and discernment is required with respect to the desire for a connection. One way of

    discerning is by paying attention to de-centring.

    De-centring occurs in the encounter with the foreigner when the initial intentions controlling

    the situation, imaginary projects prove impossible. In a situation where the imaginary

    landmarks of consciousness are lost, when words fail one, people still manage somehow to

    experience the emergence of an immanent link that transcends all the differences, all the and

    barriers of language and culture. Thus two people, who just a moment ago were perfect

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    strangers, come together. In the sense of plenitude of this unity, joy reflects the

    accomplishment, in this encounter, of the renewed presence of each person in their own

    singular life, and in the others. This oneness and the joy it brings are not contrived (unless

    they are feigned): people do not create it themselves: unity comes and joy springs forth in asurge of self-affection of each life. Thus, as with humour, which reflects a regenerated

    confidence in their life, people experience in this encounter with strangers a gesture within

    their life that restores their living beings confidence in one another. They feel this connection

    that brings together their different lives like a present, a gift. Being welcomed by the other is

    conducive to the welcoming of this gift. Thus, for example, in the humour or joy of an

    encounter, the living being, experiencing himself, also experiences the very real change that

    regenerates him/her and restores his faith in life, as the trusting unity in others shows.

    The lost Energy, self-centred ego and v iolence

    The living being thus experiences the surge of an acting, intimate force (which, although it did

    not bring about itself, willingly accepts it), a force which Michel Henry, in The Barbarismcalled

    the Energy of life: We call Energy that which occurs in the pathetic relationship to the being

    as its phenomenological effectuation, as the irrepressible test of what grows from one and

    takes one over to excess(1987: 174).Rolf Khn refers to as the silentlife Force: The only

    true generation lies in this silent, invisible life which grabs us and bowls us over with its Force(2003:253). He stresses that the desire-to-live, is always a self-desire to live life, (2006),

    and which their precursor Marx had called the active life-process:

    This method of approach is not devoid of premises. It starts out from the real premises and

    does not abandon them for a moment. Its premises are men, not in any fantastic isolation

    and rigidity, but in their actual, empirically perceptible process of development under definite

    conditions. As soon as this active life-process is described, history ceases to be a collection

    of dead facts as it is with the empiricists (themselves still abstract), or an imagined activity of

    imagined subjects, as with the idealists. Where speculation ends in real life there real,

    positive science begins: the representation of the practical activity, of the practical process of

    development of men. (Marx, German Ideology)

    The Energy of life in, for example, humour or in the joy of an encounter, regenerates ones

    trust in life and in the other. This Energy with a capital E means the regenerating force that is

    at work within affective life and which subjectivity cannot produce. In humour, Energy affects

    a transition from subjectivity that relies on the complacency of pleasant feelings (positive

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    hetero-affection) or its distress when these feelings are unpleasant (negative hetero-affection)

    to the pure self-feeling (auto-affection), to confidence in oneself. The Energy of life brings

    about another transition, that of the isolation, the antagonism experienced by the subject

    towards the other, into the sense of unity, a unity which does not erase the differencesbetween them (Gely, 2007). Manifested by the joy of an encounter, the Energy of life opens

    itself up to the subjective movement of life, and to faith in the other.

    And yet, as we have seen, the virtual organisation creates, via emails, images of things,

    abstract, numbered representations of situations, in an opaque light. If the light of the world is

    opaque, what transformations could the Energy of life bring about? In the absence of face-to-

    face encounters, or failing to make the parameter of pathic flesh,a structuring element of

    means of exchange, in the absence of any means of sharing that which occurs in the light of

    the experience of life, the subjective, acting praxis, it is, in the virtual organisation, a stumbling

    block (Greek: skandalon), an obstacle that is out in the way of the Energy of life. The living

    therefore have immense difficulty in making the transition from doubt to confidence in oneself

    and in life, from mistrust to trust, in experiencing the surge of immanent unity (in the

    phenomenality of life). In such a situation, the various differences between people soon

    produce antagonism, unless careful monitoring and controlling systems are put in place in the

    objective light of the world in order to neutralise this antagonism, however fallible such

    systems inevitably are.

    Forcing people to work under conditions in which, as Philippe Breton says, physical

    encounters are taboo and people meet little and communicate much (192: 116) means

    depriving them of access to the Energy of life, of the essential, inner dynamic of their life at

    work (or at least, making this access extremely difficult). This is ignorance, a wilful desire to

    shut out this inner dynamic to and force the ego into a situation in which it is difficult to escape

    from the bubble of its own representations, and leads to what Michel Henry calls the

    transcendental illusion of the ego, the illusion that allows the ego to think of itself as the

    foundation of its being (1996: 177).Consequently, as the ego can no longer be replenished

    by the Energy of life, it needs motivational stimuli from the pulsations of the world; the ego

    prey to the transcendental illusion is: an ego that is only open to the world and given in it and

    is thus forgetful of its own essence. (1996: 320). In this illusion, the subject who forgets that

    he does not give life to himself is self-absorbed and completely loses the notion of the alter

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    ego putting himself at the centre of this system; each person only worries about the other

    inasmuch as it concerns him. (1996: 320).

    In a working situation in which it is particularly difficult to deploy a perception in the light of life,of the Energy of life, and which is thus not conducive to uniting people in spite of their

    differences, doubt, loss of self-confidence and mistrust take root. This lack of speech driven

    by confidence both on oneself and on the other creates a tacit, repressed, insidious conflict.

    This situation was really hard because nothing was said, everything was sensed and

    assumed. We sensed a tacit aggressiveness, resistance. In this vicious circle, insecurity

    reigns and any attempt to ask for clarity or explanations, any suggestions, are stifled,

    repressed: In this atmosphere of insecurity, I didnt even dare ask any questions when I

    didnt understand for fear of looking stupid or incompetent. These disparate teams cannot

    become a real team: it was a virtual team.

    Truth, sense of plenitude and giveness

    The phenomenology of life leads us to take a different view of action and work. Living

    subjectivity is not impassive and motionless: it is open to the Energy of life that regenerates

    the confident link of the Self with itself, life and others. And that is not all: all work is the effort

    of subjectivity to provide for its needs (those of the biological body) and those of its lovedones: food, clothing, a roof over ones head, medical treatment. The physical or intellectual

    effort that goes into work is also felt in self-affection, in feeling this need, making the effort,

    taking pleasure in accomplishment. Work is experienced in the light of life; this work, which is

    above all part of objectifying economic representations, must be perceived within its context:

    that of living subjectivity.

    This is why in work, via effort, there is a transition from need to satisfaction. But the

    motivation behind human labour cannot be reduced to the need to satisfy these basic needs

    alone. Neither can it be limited to the quest for an image of oneself in the light of the world, or

    for what gives an image in all circumstances: money.For work to be lively, another transition

    takes place in the self-affection open to the Energy of life. The subject that accepts this

    Energy when it is dispersed in images, amid its various worries finds the strength to re-centre

    and be at one with the inner dynamic of its life. Thus, any truly subjective work is that of a

    person who finds, after a number of errors and distractions, in the invisible dynamic of its life

    a tie, that living I of an I can which can set its physical and intellectual abilities in motion

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    and expose it to higher forces to which it can aspire: an accomplishment of the desire of life

    when it is combined with the satisfaction of biological needs. Michel Henry calls this meeting

    of the need and desire for life a culture of life, a culture which is also that of Desire- a Desire

    that has nothing on which to model itself in things because it is the Desire for Life and thusthe Desire for oneself (1987: 42). It is for this reason that the subjective effort can only be

    understood in relation to what creates and increases it:

    The movement by which life tirelessly comes to one in the conservation and growth of

    oneself this movement is not an act of own-will, it is not the result of any effort but comes

    long before it and makes it possible; it is the totally, radically passive being with oneself in

    which the being is given to itself Thus the movement of life is the effortless effort, in which

    all effort and all abandon is given to oneself at the heart of the being given to itself in the

    absolute passivity of the radical immanence of life. (1987: 170-171).

    Understanding that effort could cohere or not with its subjective foundation, Marx, points out

    Henry, changes not only the role of truth but also its nature. And yet since Galileo, the

    decisive operation is mathematising, with the formulae it wishes to develop (1936: 50-51).

    The notion of truth is therefore reduced to the exactness of calculations.By questioning the

    absolute truth of ideas based on such representations, Marx places truth in life: The

    absolute truth is that which lies in the reality of life, in the praxis (1976: 470); on other words:

    it is no longer the representation of consciousness but the immanence of life that constitute

    the essence of truth (1976: 478). It is for this reason that, in the light of life, the notion of truth

    must be radically revised, and this, against the grain of the majority of Western tradition which

    sees truth as the correspondence between representations and the reality, in the light of the

    world (notion of exactness).

    It is precisely because truth was defined by the philosophical tradition based on ideal

    structures and their most obvious characteristics that the most original truth is in life has

    ended up absurdly devalued and discredited compared with this rational truth which never

    was and which could only ever be the representation a simple representation. (1976: 470)

    True action, the act of I can, is that which is consistent with the Energy of life that moves it

    and gives itself to it in its own flesh: true is what we need to assist, to which we need to

    donate our own flesh(1987: 124). The same applies to the act of speech, the true speech

    is that which originates from the dynamic of a subjective life and is thus the living I that

    articulates it. When the participant observer wrote There was communication in that

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    information was passed on but no real speech, she meant that, in the virtual organisation,

    the action of speaking occurred, or at least attempted to occur in the light of the world, but this

    action was disconnected, separate (Greek: diabolon) from the dynamic of life of the

    interlocutors; such an effort, disconnected from its source, is exhausting.

    And yet there is a possible truth in living work in which life cultivates the effort that aims to

    satisfy a biological need. This effort is cultivated, civilised and civilising because in its

    subjectiveessence, it refers to the prescriptions of ones life, its dynamism of development,

    the Energy of life. It is this that, moved by the desire for life, human, living labour leads to the

    increase of singular subjective abilities. Effort, thus liberated, contrary to thermodynamic laws,

    is not exhausted: on the contrary, it is like a growth, a reinforcing of the living, acting

    subjectivity: freeing energy doesnt mean being rid of it The law of life and of

    phenomenology is not entropy Freeing energy means on the contrary, giving it free rein,

    deploying its being, allowing it to grow.(1987: 174-175).

    But, in doing this, we are not yet fully aware of the plenitude of this praxis. Because the living

    being experience the Energy of life in different forms, and receives it without giving it to

    himself, experiences his life and the plenitude of its praxis like a gift (assuming he does not

    fall into the transcendental illusion of the ego which consists in thinking, outside of life, of the

    source of all ones powers and projects). Thus all living work carries within it the dimension of

    a gift. The offerings of the first harvest made by traditional societies are an extremely

    revealing example of this. And there are a number of interesting examples of this concept in

    everyday language: to give advice, a lesson, a lecture, a concert, etc. A gift, for the living

    being, means being at one with the Energy of life, the dynamic of ones own life. And thus, in

    its own context, the self-affection of affective flesh, in the light of experienced life, and

    nowhere else, that work, the living praxis, recognises itself as ethical or unethical, beneficial

    or harmful for life.

    III The pathogenic organization and of the sickness of working life

    A catastrophic reduct ion

    When the organisation of work no longer treats the parameter of flesh as a structural element

    of encounter, the employees within an organisation feel cut off from reality, life and its Energy:

    there is no self-confidence or faith in others and the work is exhausting. In the light of what we

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    have discussed thus far, it is reasonable to suggest that the feeling of loss of meaning so

    frequently mentioned indicates that work and effort are not in tune with the Energy of life and

    its recommendations. In such a context, the subject is tempted, in order to save its strength,

    to withdraw, to cancel the movement of affective life, and adopts an attitude of indifference.But in withdrawing thus and shutting oneself out from the inner dynamic of life, there is no

    longer the living unity of differences. So there is no longer any basis for organisation, and the

    ego, ill-assured, identifies itself as being against. In negating his feelings in indifference, the

    subject becomes resentful and takes his frustration and resentment out on the other (this

    theme is explored in Vasse (1999) and Fa (2008). Instead of saving his strength, he ends up

    being forced to wasting considerable energy and effort on objecting.

    We got the impression the North American teams thought we didnt listen to their point of

    view. Yet when the project co-ordinator asked their opinion, they werent forthcoming and

    said that she was the project manager that it was her decision and theyd go along with

    whatever she decided. Instead of setting deadlines, she asked them what they could

    manage. It was a vicious circle. The Americans must have thought that we were only

    pretending to be open-minded, and remained defensive and then made out we didnt listen to

    them. It was very difficult for everyone.

    Thus, in our case, the virtual organisation leads to a dead end: the teams make efforts andachieve nothing satisfactory, neither in the light of the world nor in that of life. Here in such a

    virtual organisation, the world eludes the grasp of the living, embodied subject, and gives rise

    to a feeling of apprehension describe by the participant observer and her manager: we came

    to dread these weekly conference call.Nor was there any understanding, no way of grasping

    the situation, of having control over the reality, it is out of ones hands. Lets notice that the

    idea of control, of having a situation literally in ones hands, is at the root of the word

    management: it comes from the Italian managgiare, which in turn comes from the Latin

    manus.

    Because where there is no shared life, there is no world in common, the worlds of work

    remains separated, in our situation the three units fail to find unity. Such a virtual

    organisation is disorganised, which not only casts doubt on reality and creates confusion and

    makes it difficult if not impossible to work together but, by obstructing the Energy of life,

    also leads to loss of confidence in oneself, others, and life, and exhausting, fruitless efforts.

    This barbarian solution causes genuine suffering: the confusion of the builders of the tower

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    of Babel takes root. Here, the virtual organisation makes the light of the world and of life

    opaque. This type of organisation forces one to undertake actions which, deprived of the

    dynamic of life, are without reason or light, faceless and blind. (1987: 99).

    We saw with Husserl how, by using the paradigm of science pioneered by Galileo, abstraction

    allows a theoretical-logical praxis develop. Michel Henry points out that the catastrophic

    consequences of such reduction are not just the overlooking of the world of life, but that, by

    eliminating the sensitive aspects of the realities observed Red or yellow, rough or smooth,

    hot or cold, fragrant or malodorous, (2000: 142) Galilean science rules out the possibility of

    the pathetic self-giving of life in which the senses are felt and experienced, and thereby

    eliminates our phenomenological life (2000: 146). Thus, in the scientific organisation as is

    used in the Western world a direct legacy of Galileos paradigm subjective, active life, its

    dynamism and Energy, are ignored and kept at a distance. People in such organisations rely

    on sophisticated systems for making objective, abstract calculations to structure and regulate

    human organisations (controlling and monitoring systems, IT applications). As such, the

    virtual organisation is one of the last bastions of this scientific organisation, whose limitations

    are all too apparent as the following story shows.

    First notes about emancipation paths

    When taken to its logical conclusion, this type of organisation inflicts immeasurable suffering

    upon the subjects by forcing them to work chained to a computer screen, constantly setting

    deadlines, (which prevents them from being able to draw from the Energy of life and the

    possibilities this offers), by spreading their efforts over various projects which go against the

    dynamic of a living praxis, by subjecting them to assessment processes based purely on

    objective criteria. Plunged into the depths of the suffering by having their actions and life

    subjected to hyper-technologisation, employees desire to live risks turning it against itself.

    (note the recent spate of suicides in the workplace in highly technological environments).

    Others manage to be pulled back from the edge by the Energy of life, and, along with others,

    try to hang on and develop emancipator moves by striving for a better organisation which will

    be less depriving of subjective and intersubjective life dynamism. After several very difficult

    months, the participant observer went to Canada and was pleasantly surprised to receive a

    warm welcome and see some of the difficulties ironed out.

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    This experience suggests that there is an urgent need to review the organisation of work

    based on what we have learned about the living subject. In order to do this Western

    organisers should rethink the Galilean principles that form the basis of their scientific model.

    This idea, supported by the phenomenology of Husserl and Michel Henry, concurs with thefollowing observation by Edgar Morin: I think that the West in general and Europe in

    particular have focused on the materialistic, technical aspects of civilisation, and by doing so

    have neglected everything to do with the soul, the spirit, the relationship with oneself and with

    others. (Interview in Le Monde, 2 January 2008). It is therefore necessary to bear in mind

    that Life is the most immediate, most substantial form, which makes up the principle of any

    cognitive appropriation of the world, (1976: 468) and, consequently, when organizing, to

    think about types of organisation in which the pathetic self-giving of life can manifest itself. In

    other words, to make the parameter of flesh a fundamental element of work organisations so

    that the affective life can manifest itself.

    By examining this from this angle, we therefore raise the question of a humanly sustainable

    development of productive activity based on another reason than argumentative reasons

    (although this too is necessary). Such a development would be rooted in: the reason of all

    reasons [that] is the reason hidden in the depths of life (1976: 418). This is why, by

    questioning the abstract rationalism of the scientific organisation of work in general, and the

    virtual organisation in particular, we suggest the possibility of organizing a sustainable

    organisation: one that is favourable, in its form and its mechanisms, to life and living together.

    There are simple, solutions to make life easier for remote workers. These mainly involve

    visits, setting up welcoming committees, go-between roles, and holding regular face-to-face

    meetings, including open spaces for lively speech on the basis of lived experience (Fa,

    2005). Implementing such solutions imply simply ceasing to hold up as an ideal utopian

    organisations based on the paradigm of the representation and phenomenality of the light of

    the world. Makeshift solutions such as are currently implemented (coaching, peer

    committees, etc) are half-baked: their short-term benefits are undoubted, but there are no

    long-term advantages whilst such types of organisation are held up as an ideal. Another way

    of bringing about this un-idealising process and challenging the idealist virtualist managers

    might be to think back to the notions of profession and role did and to link those notions to

    the here developed understanding of immanent and shared living praxis (see Gly, 2007).

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    Finally, it could be argued seriously about the risk of destroying value posed by the

    technology of virtual work organisations. In 1990, Michel Henry brilliantly illustrated and

    anticipated the domination of technological thinking and its undermining of action and value

    creation inFromCommunism to Capitalism: a Theory of Catastrophe:Let us now project this radical change in technique onto what we have called from the

    beginning of our analyses the real process of production [] subjectivity living work

    becomes progressively removed from the real process of production [] (1990: 160-161).

    This progressive elimination of living work from the real process of production means it is

    increasingly unable to produce value (1990: 165). See also Mintzberg (2008).

    Of course, this destruction of value can be masked by economic calculations which justify the

    virtual organisation in a global economy.An idea that is often questioned by the people

    directly involved as they have difficulty making themselves understood. This denial illustrates

    the strength of the Galilean paradigm of abstraction and its contempt for reality, at the

    expense of the economic setbacks that often occur. But, as Michel Henry points out, these

    calculations are based on objective equivalents of real work and are the result of random

    conventions: The economic world is a series of objective, unreal, ideal versions of work

    which have replaced living work in order to measured and counted, instead of this elusive

    force. (1990: 114).

    In such calculations, money is no longer seen as a means for exchanging but as the end.

    This reversal occurs when individuals or groups cut themselves off from reality, from acting

    subjectivity, and replace it with a double unreality: the representation of any representation,

    money. Through global exchanges, this random substitution comes into its own: what gives

    the illusion of increasing value is the differential of the terms of exchange between the

    different human communities, particularly in the way living work is considered and protectedby laws. This substitution consists of a reversal of the cycle of exchange: in the traditional

    economy, this cycle used money as a means of exchange and could be summed up as

    Merchandise-Money-Merchandise). But in a financial economy, the exchange is reversed:

    money, the value of the exchange, is no longer a means to an end but the end itself. The

    cycle is therefore one of Money-Merchandise-Money), money becoming the aim of production

    (1990: 141-142). In this reversal, the real element, living work, is subjected to a double

    unreality, to the ideal entity whose sole mission is to allow it to be measured. (1990: 143).

    This is, says Henry, a kind of madness. Madness is there when a reflection, an appearance,

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    becomes the only principle of an action (1990: 143). P. Artus and M-P. Virard (2005) a few

    years ago pointed out that, by dispersing teams, ceasing to invest and demanding big short-

    term results, capitalism was destroying itself. Crisis is a good moment to question ready-

    made thoughts and suggest novel understandings and perspectives.

    In order to minimise the arbitrary nature of abstract calculation on the sole basis of economic

    figures, that can be a source of violence, the living desire for sustainable development of

    human life must examine the frameworks (legal, organisational, etc) which should regulate

    exchanges and favour fair trade. However, the aim of this article is not to develop the

    components of a political regulation of international exchanges based on a phenomenology of

    life. We can find unexpected allies. Just one example, in The Wealth of Nations, Adam Smith

    argued the need for customs protection:

    The second case, in which it will generally be advantageous to lay some burden upon foreign

    for the encouragement of domestic industry is, when some tax is imposed at home upon the

    produce of the latter. In this case, it seems reasonable that an equal tax should be imposed

    upon the like produce of the former.(Book IV)

    More recently, Putnam (1992) argued in favour of a democracy and democratic institutions

    which, we notice, are based on life, its dynamic of growth and its energy. Thus he elaborates

    a political theory of potentialisation and capacitation. Marcuse (1969), in his critical theory,

    was close to this aim. Although relying on Freuds life drive he let some ambiguities in the

    conceptual approach of such drive (see Henry, ). With Henry, we have argued here that life,

    which is each time a subjective and shared life, should be the foundation for a critical and

    emancipating approach of organizations and institutions.

    Conclusion

    Our phenomenological examination of adoption of the concept of virtual organisation is

    based on Husserls critique in Krisisof behaviour that follows pure Limit-shapes. The virtual

    organisation is a working organisation which pushes Western metaphysics of representation

    to its limit because such a type of organisation only allows for remote exchanges of

    representations. One could of course cite a combination of economic, political, technological

    and financial reasons to explain the increasing popularity of this type of working organisation.

    But through Husserl, we can trace its origin in a way of appearing and identify this in the

    idealistic habitusof an avant-garde modernist trying to implement it. By idealistic, we mean

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    the confusing of abstract representations with the reality of living affective life and its Energy.

    By aligning with Henry, we could argue that modern organisers can no longer see the

    fundamental distinction [] between the relationship between consciousness and its

    representations on the one hand, and, on the other hand, that between life and its immanentdeterminations (1976: 393), and have substituted consciousness for life (1976: 394).

    Critical Studies of the science of organisations have clearly exposed the primacy of

    abstraction and the importance of technology for the idealistic theorists of organisations and

    those who relate and apply their thoughts (Alvesson and Willmott, Mintzberg (2004),

    Bourguignon,(2005) to name but a few). Along with Michel Henry, we wish to stress that this

    idealism is based on a refusal of life.

    We have seen, with Husserl, that the virtual organisation of work hinders ones perception of

    the world of life and undermines the life of intentional consciousness. It forces its subjects to

    inhabit separate worlds, linked only by technology. The subjects therefore have great difficulty

    in creating a shared, common world because the means of exchange (i.e. distance, the

    absence of face-to-face contact, the language barrier) prevent the worlds from being

    phenomenalised. Moreover, by disregarding the living, acting subjectivities and their affective

    flesh, one could say, as has Michel Henry that this type of working organisation disregards

    the reality of work: the living, subjective praxis, the effort invested by subjects. Thus the

    concepts of truth and reason and their close ties with subjective life are destroyed. Worse still,

    in hindering the phenomenalisation of pathic flesh, the virtual organisation hinders the Energy

    of life that revives and refreshes one, and prevents the subject from being regenerated by the

    silent speech of life, and therefore destroys its faith in life and others. The virtual organisation,

    by preventing the Energy of life from manifesting itself, obstructs the transitions brought about

    by the essential dynamic of life in work situations: the transition from anxiety to self-

    confidence, faith in others and in life; the transition from passive (feeling helpless and

    overwhelmed by a situation) to active. The transition from the self-centred ego to a

    regenerated, generous, ethical ego that is open to truth, to inter-subjective, dynamism. In

    doing this, the virtual organisation subjects the human body to the exhausting drive of a

    technological life, to the fast-paced world of business. The aim of this article is to point out

    how devious such an attack on the life of consciousness and subjective life is because is

    occurs in the just-like of an encounter: in that very place where living subjects usually find

    the path to regeneration.

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