domingo, 21 de diciembre de 2025

THE LINKING METHOD FOUNDS A SCIENCE

 


Rubén Rojas Breu

THE LINKING METHOD FOUNDS A SCIENCE

Thesis

With the Linking Method, a work of my own authorship, a science is founded.
It is the science whose object is social interaction.
Since social interaction is always interaction among organizations—given that human beings constitutively belong to them—we can affirm that the object of the science born from the Linking Method is the interaction among human organizations.
Thus, the Linking Method founds the science whose object is the interaction among human organizations, an interaction that expresses the social.
It remains open for further development and debate whether, in defining such an object, the Linking Method overlaps with sociology or partially with anthropology, or whether it is the midwife of a properly scientific sociology.

Foundation

What is to be understood by science is a matter of great complexity that has generated controversies, disputes, and often vigorous efforts, without definitive answers having been reached.
Therefore, I adhere here to what is, to a certain extent, consolidated—at least as an intention—in order to respond to this question.

According to the dictionary of the Royal Spanish Academy, science, from the Latin scientia, “is the set of knowledge obtained through observation and reasoning, systematically structured, from which general principles and laws are deduced with predictive capacity and that are experimentally verifiable.”

Although such a definition is limited, necessarily debatable, and insufficient, what is generated by the Linking Method fully conforms to it. That is to say, even starting from a precarious definition, the statement “the Linking Method founds a science” fits within a certain convention. The Latin expression scientia is translated as “knowledge, skill, knowing.”

From what I consider an epistemologically sound standpoint, a science is defined as such when it meets the following requirements:

  • It has a formal object, conceived as a conceptually expressed relationship.
  • It has a method that allows it to account for that formal object.
  • It develops a highly complex theoretical body that articulates hypotheses and concepts, always understood as relationships (never as substances; science does not deal with “being” or “essences,” nor is it associated with these categories typical of more traditional philosophy).
  • It is successfully applicable to diverse fields of human action and to different problem areas, transforming initial conditions and providing responses of a certain scope—responses that will always be provisional to some degree, which is consistent with the premise that science is in permanent evolution.

The Linking Method creates the science whose formal object is the interaction among organizations, which is an expression of social interaction.

It has a Method—precisely called the Linking Method—which I describe in detail in my book Linking Method. The Value of Strategy, as well as in various publications on my blog rubenrojasbreu.blogspot.com.

The word “method” derives from the combination of the Greek terms meta (= toward) and hodós (= path) and is usually translated as “path to reach a result.”

In my approach, the method is a branching path that opens into multiple routes in the search for scientific knowledge. It bears no resemblance whatsoever to the vulgar uses that consider it equivalent to a procedure, as in expressions such as “I have a method for organizing my desk,” “I have a method to get my students to pay attention,” or “I apply my method to clean the garden,” etc.

A method is something of the highest importance. In science, we speak of the hypothetical-deductive method, the inductive method, or the method based on abduction. It is precisely this last expression that characterizes the Linking Method, insofar as it articulates deduction with induction—the continuous passage, in both directions, from the singular to the universal, from the particular to the general, from data to theory.

The Linking Method follows steps of the greatest complexity and, to a large extent, has significant similarities with what the French thinker Edgar Morin calls “the method of complexity” or “complex thinking,” characterized by interconnecting different dimensions of reality.

The Linking Method continuously “links,” intensifying the interrelation among data and dimensions that, a priori, appear disconnected and even give rise to the perception that they could not be interconnected.

Thus, by way of a sampling of examples, through the Linking Method I was able to respond to questions such as:

  • the attraction that the Radical presidential candidate in 1983 exerted on a large portion of female voters, by linking data that analysts and political leaders viewed as unrelated;
  • identifying the reasons for resistance to the incorporation of balanced pet food, today so widespread thanks to the keys I identified;
  • determining successful positioning, together with the design of a strategy that proved victorious, for the Peronist candidate for governor of the Province of Buenos Aires in 1987 and for the Peronist Renewal;
  • identifying all the actors, factors, manifest and latent motivations involved in the use of mobile telephony, which propelled this service, turning it into what I anticipatorily named at the beginning of the century the “personal portable central of communications and operations”;
  • showing the interconnections among actors, factors, and the various dimensions of reality involved in accidents, which led to a successful prevention campaign;
  • elucidating the significance of Aerolíneas Argentinas, including the values attributed to its origin and trajectory, the skill of its pilots and personnel, and the traditional symbol of the “condor,” among others.

These, as well as countless other achievements obtained through the application of the Linking Method, were largely due to the fact that through it I was able to articulate what common sense or stereotyped professional practice—so typical of many intellectuals, analysts, and consultants—overlooks or keeps disconnected. This lack of connection is particularly visible in surveys, in which what should be articulated and synthesized is isolated and fragmented.

It is worth noting that the Linking Method is grounded in qualitative research, assigning quantifiable elements only a complementary role.

It is also worth distinguishing method from model, an expression currently in vogue and frequently misused.

The Method is a path that constantly opens routes toward scientific knowledge. A model is a reproduction of reality, whether actual or potential.
The Method—particularly the Linking Method—is a generator of models, such that models are epistemologically subordinate to it or derived from its application.

The Linking Method has developed, and continues to update, a highly complex theoretical body applicable to the social, political, and market fields. This theoretical body is today of very broad scope and includes, in a non-exhaustive enumeration, at least:

  • Its axiomatics
  • Its approach to subject–object interaction
  • What is to be understood by desire
  • What is to be understood by Law
  • Segmentation by Links
  • The Matrix of Linking Positionings
  • The signifier–signified relationship in all its development and updating
  • The question of power
  • The two tendencies in the construction, affirmation, and exercise of power
  • What is to be understood by politics
  • What is to be understood by market
  • The original conceptualization of categories such as “democracy,” “people,” “mass,” “public opinion,” “people” (gente), “electorate,” etc.
  • What is to be understood by competition
  • The organization and its context
  • Theory of strategy
  • Theory of communication

As anticipated, this enumeration is far from exhaustive; in various publications of my authorship the different conceptualizations and theories that compose the highly complex theoretical body of the Linking Method can be found.

Finally, the Linking Method, and the science it founds, is applicable across the broadest spectrum of areas of human behavior and to the widest variety of related problems.

In its application, it has proven to be valid and reliable, insofar as it has generated precise diagnoses, tested forecasts, and at the same time designed strategies, formulated recommendations for policies to be implemented, and proposed actions that proved effective.

By paying attention, investigating, and delving into the history of the Linking Method, it is possible to verify the above. The case studies are highly illustrative and readily available.

In any event, I remain available to respond to questions, to guide, and to foster a more thorough understanding of the Linking Method, of the science it founds, of its foundations, and of its scope.

Bibliography

Only texts of my own authorship that are useful for expanding and deepening what is presented in this article are included here.
The authors who over the years have been sources for the development and updating of the Linking Method are cited, together with their works, in my book Linking Method. The Value of Strategy and in my various publications.

Rojas Breu, Rubén (2002). Linking Method. The Value of Strategy. Buenos Aires: Cooperatives Publishers.

Rubén Rojas Breu (2011). Contributions of a Historical Event to Strategic Management. The Battle of Chaeronea. Mimeo. Buenos Aires. PDF and PowerPoint versions.

Rubén Rojas Breu (2012). Considerations on the Relationship between Qualitative Research and Management. Buenos Aires: CIAP, School of Economic Sciences, University of Buenos Aires.

Rubén Rojas Breu (2013). Segmentation, Positioning and Brand: An Approach from the Linking Method. First edition. Buenos Aires: CIAP, School of Economic Sciences, University of Buenos Aires.

Rubén Rojas Breu (2014). The Desire of Strategy. First edition. Buenos Aires: CIAP, School of Economic Sciences, University of Buenos Aires.

Rubén Rojas Breu (2017). Qualitative Research as a Primary Tool of Management. Second edition. Mimeo. Buenos Aires.
First edition: Buenos Aires, CIAP, School of Economic Sciences, University of Buenos Aires, 2012.

Rubén Rojas Breu (2018). Segmentation by Links and Linking Positionings. Specially prepared PowerPoint presentation.

Rubén Rojas Breu (2012). Considerations on the Relationship between Qualitative Research and Management. Buenos Aires: CIAP, School of Economic Sciences, University of Buenos Aires.

On rubenrojasbreu.blogspot.com, the following publications:

  • Historical overview of the Linking Method
  • Signification according to the Linking Method
  • The axioms of the Linking Method
  • Law as foundational to human organization
  • Strategic management according to the Linking Method
  • Epistemology and qualitative research
  • Desire according to the Linking Method and its relation to power
  • Concept of organization
  • More on the Linking Method
  • Case to analyze and solve according to the Linking Method
  • Linking Method: fields of application
  • Social research, strategy, and communication according to the Linking Method
  • Social research, strategy, and communication according to the Linking Method

Traducción IA

Rubén Rojas Breu
Buenos Aires, diciembre 22 de 2025

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