Reclaiming Rationality – Why Clear Thinking Is the Core of Good Management
For years, rationality has taken a beating. Among some scholars and management thinkers, it’s been portrayed as cold, elitist, or outdated—too rigid for a world shaped by emotion, identity, and disruption.
But here’s the problem: in our rush to embrace everything but rationality—intuition, passion, improvisation—we’ve sometimes lost our grip on the very thing that helps us see clearly, decide wisely, and lead effectively.
It’s time to reclaim rationality—not as a buzzword, but as a mindset. A toolset. A discipline. And a lifeline.
Why Rationality Got a Bad Name
Rationality came under fire for good reasons. The old version was often narrow and dehumanizing. It valued spreadsheets over people, dismissed emotion as noise, and ignored the social and cultural factors shaping decisions. Behavioral economics, cognitive psychology, and DEI research all delivered necessary corrections.
But the backlash went too far. We didn’t just critique bad rationality—we began to question rationality itself. In its place, some leaders embraced gut feeling over strategy, vibe over verification, and performative confidence over actual clarity.
That’s not progress. That’s peril.
Because without rationality, we don’t get inclusivity. Or innovation. Or justice. We just get chaos with better branding.
What Rationality Really Means
Rationality isn’t about suppressing emotion—it’s about integrating it. It doesn’t mean being robotic—it means being reflective. At its core, rationality is the ability to pursue truth, weigh trade-offs, and think in systems—not just reactions.
As philosopher and cognitive scientist Keith Stanovich put it, rational thinking is “goal-directed and reality-constrained” (Stanovich & West, 2000). It’s what allows us to align our beliefs with evidence and our actions with outcomes.
In organizational life, that means:
- Making decisions based on real data, not internal politics.
- Pausing to ask, “What problem are we actually solving?”
- Knowing when to doubt ourselves—and when not to.
Rationality isn’t the opposite of values. It’s how we live them—intentionally, consistently, and accountably.
The Case for Rational Thinking—Now More Than Ever
Recent research shows that rationality is a better predictor of effective real-world decision-making than even intelligence. In a study by Butler, Pentoney, and Bong (2017), critical thinking skills—central to rationality—were more strongly correlated with sound life decisions than IQ. These findings confirm that it’s not how “smart” you are, but how clearly you think that matters most.
In organizations, the stakes are even higher. Rational processes lead to better team performance (Curşeu et al., 2013), more ethical decisions (Bonnefon et al., 2016), and stronger leadership credibility (Bourantas & Agapitou, 2016). That’s not just theory—it’s survival.
In short, if you’re leading without a rational mindset, you’re guessing. And guesswork doesn’t scale.
The Clarity Trifecta
To lead with clarity, managers need three interlocking capacities:
- Cognitive Integrity Can you separate fact from interpretation? Do you revise your view when the evidence shifts? Can you spot false dilemmas and question lazy assumptions? These are rational habits—not just intellectual ones, but moral ones.
- Decision Hygiene Cass Sunstein calls this the discipline of filtering out cognitive “noise” (Kahneman et al., 2021). It’s about creating environments where consistent, transparent, and thoughtful decisions win out over charisma or urgency.
- Transparent Communication Rationality doesn’t mean hiding behind jargon. It means communicating clearly: What are we doing? Why? What alternatives did we consider? What’s the downside? People trust clarity more than certainty.
But What About Emotion?
Rationality doesn’t cancel emotion. It coexists with it. In fact, as neuroscientist Antonio Damasio showed, decision making suffers without emotion (Damasio, 1994). But the best decisions are informed by emotion, not hijacked by it.
We can feel strongly and still think clearly. We must.
A Leadership Imperative
Reclaiming rationality means doing what good managers have always done—but doing it more deliberately:
- Gather facts before judging people.
- Define the problem before proposing a solution.
- Say “I don’t know” when that’s the honest answer.
- Build systems that reward evidence, not ego.
In a noisy, tribalized world, rationality isn’t boring. It’s bold. It’s how we cut through confusion, make better calls, and lead with integrity—not illusion.
So no, rationality isn’t dead. It’s just been underappreciated. Let’s bring it back.
If this sparked something in you, subscribe to Leading with Clarity for more reflections on human behavior, leadership, and the power of thinking clearly.
Let’s make clarity cool again.
References
Bonnefon, J.-F., Shariff, A., & Rahwan, I. (2016). The social dilemma of autonomous vehicles. Science, 352(6293), 1573–1576. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aaf2654
Bourantas, D., & Agapitou, V. (2016). Leadership meta-competencies: Discovering hidden virtues. Routledge. https://www.routledge.com/Leadership-Meta-Competencies-Discovering-Hidden-Virtues/Bourantas-Agapitou/p/book/9780367670092
Butler, H. A., Pentoney, C., & Bong, M. P. (2017). Predicting real-world outcomes: Critical thinking ability is a better predictor of life decisions than intelligence. Thinking Skills and Creativity, 25, 38–46. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tsc.2017.06.005
Curşeu, P. L., Jansen, R. J. G., & Chappin, M. M. H. (2013). Decision rules and group rationality: Cognitive gain or standstill? PLOS ONE, 8(2), e56454. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0056454
Damasio, A. R. (1994). Descartes’ error: Emotion, reason, and the human brain. Putnam Publishing.
Kahneman, D., Sibony, O., & Sunstein, C. R. (2021). Noise: A flaw in human judgment. Little, Brown Spark.
Stanovich, K. E., & West, R. F. (2000). Individual differences in reasoning: Implications for the rationality debate? Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 23(5), 645–665. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X00003435