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Project Management | Agile | Alice in Wonderland | Cheshire Cat | Strategy

Grinning Without a Head

The Cheshire cat fallacy in agile methods

Fabio Turel
3 min readDec 5, 2024

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The Cheshire Cat from Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland is famous for its mischievous grin that lingers long after the cat itself has vanished.

With a philosophical smirk that defies logic, this enigmatic character embodies the impossible: an effect without a cause, a smile without a face.

John Tenniel, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

It’s this impossible image that philosopher Philip Pettit used to describe a profound intellectual trap: the Cheshire Cat fallacy is the idea that rights can exist without any corresponding obligations.

But cats *are* agile, aren’t they?

This “grin without a body” phenomenon can also creep into agile methodologies, potentially undermining the very principles that make them so effective.

Agile methods offer many benefits, such as flexibility, customer collaboration, and rapid iteration — but these outcomes can’t exist in isolation. They require a foundation of structure, accountability, and collaboration. Unfortunately, what began as a revolutionary approach to creating more responsive work environments has often been misinterpreted as a…

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Fabio Turel
Fabio Turel

Written by Fabio Turel

A Project Manager must be a good storyteller. Stories about my profession, my interests and my passions converge in this place.

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