But on the other hand, Taylor’s “nondirectional” management style looked a little too much like manipulation for Pake’s taste, just as his commitment to “group cohesion” and “a common goal” smelled a little too much like intellectual fascism. He feared that CSL’s shared vision would ultimately harden into what would later be called political correctness, an ideology that would stifle all dissent and all further creativity. After all, says Pake, “creativity is a function of freedom.”