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Organizational versus Market Knowledge: From Concrete Embodiment to Abstract Representation
Authors:Max Boisot  Yan Li
Institution:(1) University of Birmingham, c/o P.O.Box 144, 08870 Sitges (Barcelona), Spain;(2) Department of Economics, George Mason University, MSN 3G4 University Drive, Fairfax, VA 22030, USA
Abstract:Synopsis In contrast to the neoclassical economic presumption in favor of markets, we argue that organizations, not markets should be taken as our default assumption. We do so on information processing grounds. We distinguish between Zen and market Knowledge. The first is embodied and hard to articulate and the second abstract-symbolic. In human evolution, the first type of knowledge came first, and, on any pragmatic definition of knowledge, it still incorporates most of what we mean by the term. We take codification and abstraction as the two data processing activities that lead to the articulation of knowledge into an abstract-symbolic form. We develop a conceptual framework, the Information-Space (I-Space) to show how far the articulation of knowledge leads to its being shared. Whereas an unlimited sharing of information and knowledge leads to market-oriented outcomes, a more limited sharing leads to organizational outcomes. A market-oriented economics has tended to look to physics for its models; the field of organization theory has tended to look to biology. A more organization-oriented economics would thus look more to biology for its models.
Keywords:knowledge management  transaction cost economics  codification  abstraction
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