Handbook of Knowledge and EconomicsWhy do societies benefit differently from knowledge? How exactly does social interaction interfere with knowledge acquisition and diffusion? This original Handbook brings together a wide range of differing approaches to shed light on these questions and others relating to the role and relevance of knowledge in economic analysis. |
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Table des matières
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21 | |
2 What Vilfredo Pareto brought to the economics of knowledge | 23 |
3 Knowledge in Marshall | 49 |
4 Carl Menger and Friedrich von Wieser on the role of knowledge and beliefs in the emergence and evolution of institutions | 73 |
the significance of habits of thought transactions and institutions in the conception of economic behavior | 99 |
the unexplored affinity between Boulding and Hayek | 121 |
7 The knowledgerationality connection in Herbert Simon | 144 |
12 The fragility of experiential knowledge | 267 |
13 One knowledge base or many knowledge pools? | 285 |
objective value versus convention | 313 |
PART III ECONOMICS KNOWLEDGE AND ORGANIZATION | 337 |
15 Embodied cognition organization and innovation | 339 |
a conceptual clarification | 369 |
17 Tacit knowledge | 383 |
a contribution to the knowledgebased approach of the firm | 403 |
PART II ECONOMICS KNOWLEDGE AND UNCERTAINTY | 165 |
8 A note on information knowledge and economic theory | 167 |
from Simon to Kahneman | 183 |
10 Towards a theoretical framework for the generation and utilization of knowledge | 211 |
11 Models of adaptive learning in game theory | 246 |
19 The architecture and management of knowledge in organizations | 435 |
20 Distributed knowledge and its coordination | 458 |
exploring some motivational triggers enabling change | 488 |
517 | |
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Handbook of Economics and Knowledge Richard Arena,Agnès Festré,Nathalie Lazaric Aucun aperçu disponible - 2012 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
activities agents analysis approach architecture behavior beliefs Boulding bounded rationality Cambridge choice codified knowledge cognitive distance communities communities of practice concept considered context coordination decision defined dimension disciplines dynamics economists Edward Elgar emergence environment equilibrium evolution evolutionary evolutionary economics example expected utility experiential knowledge explain ExtEnv external Fictitious Play firm function Hayek Herbert Simon human ibid idea implies important individual innovation institutions interaction interpretation Journal Kahneman knowl learning logical Marshall Marshall’s means mechanisms memory Menger mental mental models models Nash equilibrium Nelson non-logical actions Nooteboom objective observed ofthe organization organizational Pareto payoff perspective play polyarchy problem procedural procedural knowledge procedural memory production protectionism psychology rational choice theory reason representation result role routines scientific Simon social specific strategy structure subjective tacit knowledge tion tive types uncertainty University Press variables Veblen Wieser