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Not All That Can Be Automated Should Be Automated – Strategic Minimalism as a Disciplined and Ethically Grounded Approach to AI Adoption

Journal: Business Ethics and Leadership (BEL) (Vol.9, No. 4)

Publication Date:

Authors : ;

Page : 57-66

Keywords : AI adoption; ethical restraint; frugal innovation; human-machine judgment; proportionate automation; responsible AI; responsible innovation; strategic minimalism; virtue ethics; virtuous automation;

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Abstract

As organizations accelerate the adoption and use of artificial intelligence, a common misconception arises that equates automation with progress and strategic necessity. This paper argues that not all that can be automated should be automated. It introduces Strategic Minimalism, a disciplined and ethically grounded approach to AI adoption that values purpose, proportionality, and prudence over speed and scale. Drawing on bounded rationality, virtue ethics, and frugal innovation, the study reframes technological restraint as a form of higher intelligence and responsible governance. Methodologically, the framework emerges from a structured conceptual synthesis and abductive reasoning process: the three traditions are integrated into two core dimensions (automation intensity and retained human judgment), whose intersection yields four strategic quadrants (Virtuous Minimalism, Balanced Synergy, Automation Excess, and Performative Minimalism). The framework is then conceptually stress-tested against rival explanations and boundary conditions to ensure internal coherence and analytic validity. By classifying automation into necessary, excessive, and performative types, the paper advances Responsible AI scholarship by identifying restraint as a strategic virtue that strengthens accountability, human oversight, and organizational resilience. Ultimately, it contends that in the age of intelligent machines, leadership wisdom lies not in automating more, but in knowing precisely when and why to stop.

Last modified: 2026-01-24 05:24:59