Entrepreneurship and the Market Process: An Enquiry into the Growth of KnowledgeRoutledge, 8 gen 2002 - 432 pagine Enterpreneurship is central to the market process, and yet most theories of it fail to tackle the problem of how economic agents learn from their experience. This book redresses this by systematically applying the ideas of Karl Popper. It treats the entrepeneur as a theorist who develops conjectures which are then tested by exposure to the market, in an effort to eliminate errors. This is a critical aspect of the development of new ventures, as most entrepeneurial ideas turn out to be mistakes, at least in their original form. |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 34
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... exogenous disturbances. The only unexpected changes allowed are those which make agents worse off than before. As a result, entrepreneurial initiatives which expand agents' opportunity sets - such as the introduction of new products and ...
... exogenous disturbances. The only unexpected changes allowed are those which make agents worse off than before. As a result, entrepreneurial initiatives which expand agents' opportunity sets - such as the introduction of new products and ...
Pagina
... exogenous shocks in demand or supply and even when all individual consumers have identical and positive search costs (for all searches including the first), the only possible equilibrium is characterised by price dispersion. 'The Law of ...
... exogenous shocks in demand or supply and even when all individual consumers have identical and positive search costs (for all searches including the first), the only possible equilibrium is characterised by price dispersion. 'The Law of ...
Pagina
... exogenous shocks: the competitive arbitrage process is 'imperfect' and some price differences will persist. There is an 'equilibrium degree of disequilibrium' (1980: 393). In addition, search-theoretic models of adjustment rest on the ...
... exogenous shocks: the competitive arbitrage process is 'imperfect' and some price differences will persist. There is an 'equilibrium degree of disequilibrium' (1980: 393). In addition, search-theoretic models of adjustment rest on the ...
Pagina
... exogenous disturbances). Since the market is regarded as a fundamentally equilibrating process, they must treat forces that create disequilibrium as exogenous to the market system and, therefore, as not amenable to economic analysis ...
... exogenous disturbances). Since the market is regarded as a fundamentally equilibrating process, they must treat forces that create disequilibrium as exogenous to the market system and, therefore, as not amenable to economic analysis ...
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... exogenous, forces that are really endogenous. (High 1986: 113) Furthermore, although emphasising that the market is a process of continuous change, Kirzner and Casson fail to analyse adequately the conditions required to keep this ...
... exogenous, forces that are really endogenous. (High 1986: 113) Furthermore, although emphasising that the market is a process of continuous change, Kirzner and Casson fail to analyse adequately the conditions required to keep this ...
Sommario
THE DIMENSIONS OF THE ENTREPRENEURS PROBLEM SITUATION | |
THE RATIONALITY AND AIM STRUCTURE OF THE ENTREPRENEUR | |
THE ENTREPRENEURS SYSTEM OF THEORIES | |
INTRODUCING THE FALSIFICATIONIST ENTREPRENEUR | |
THE TESTING OF ENTREPRENEURIAL CONJECTURES | |
CAUSES AND DIFFICULTIES | |
SOME INSIGHTS INTO THE MARKET PROCESS | |
A POTENTIAL EMPIRICAL TEST OF THE NEW THEORY | |
AGENDA FOR FURTHER DEVELOPMENT OF THE THEORY | |
Bibliography | |
Index | |
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Entrepreneurship and the Market Process: An Enquiry into the Growth of Knowledge David A Harper Anteprima limitata - 2002 |
Entrepreneurship and the Market Process: An Enquiry Into the Growth of Knowledge David A. Harper Anteprima non disponibile - 1996 |
Entrepreneurship and the Market Process: An Enquiry Into the Growth of Knowledge David A. Harper Anteprima non disponibile - 1996 |
Parole e frasi comuni
action analysis assumptions attribution theory Austrian Economics behaviour Boland Casson characteristics competitive concept Consequently consumers corroboration critical decision decision-making dimension discussion economic agents Economic Theory emphasis empirical endogenous entrepreneurial conjectures entrepreneurial ideas entrepreneurial theory equilibrium error evaluation exogenous expectations experience explain false falsifiability falsificationism falsificationist entrepreneurs firm future GK approach GK programme GK theory growth of knowledge Hayek hypotheses immunising stratagems implies induction innovative Journal justificationism justificationist Kirzner Lachmann Lakatos latent demand Loasby logical market events market process market test method methodological individualism Musgrave neoclassical neoclassical economics non-justificationist O’Driscoll and Rizzo organisation particular philosophy of science Popper Popperian possible potential predictions problem of induction problem situation psychological rational rational expectations refutation reject research programme result scientific solutions sophisticated falsificationist specific strategy structural uncertainty successful test marketing testable theoretical theory of entrepreneurship transaction costs Type Type II error venture capitalists