pinkaku 組織病理学研究所

現場から生まれた「社腸」という組織論で、会社の詰まりを言語化する

Case 41: When Value Depends on the Evaluator

Abstract visual representing organizational pathology and structural diagnosis

Concept Inversion

Organizations assume value is intrinsic.

It is not.

Value is assigned by the evaluating system.



Structural Decomposition

The same output is exposed to multiple evaluation systems.

Each system applies different criteria.

Search systems detect structure and consistency.
Human networks respond to perceived insight and relevance.
Monetization systems assess compliance and ad suitability.

No shared definition of “value” exists.

Evaluation becomes fragmented.

Recognition diverges.

Acceptance depends on the observer.



Pathology Progression

Content is produced.

Search systems index it.

Human audiences engage with it.

Monetization systems reject it.

Confusion emerges.

Value is questioned.

The system appears inconsistent.

The output remains unchanged.



Cold Diagnosis

An organization that depends on external validation systems does not control its own value definition.

It oscillates between contradictory judgments.

Recognition varies.
Structure does not.



Structural Definition

This case defines a state where the perceived value of an output is determined not by its structure, but by the characteristics of the evaluating system.

One-Line Summary

This case describes how value becomes relative when multiple evaluation systems apply incompatible criteria.



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This article is part of the Organizational Pathology case archive.
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