Organization, Evolution, Cognition and Dynamic Capabilities
CentER Discussion Paper Series No. 2007-02
23 Pages Posted: 9 Feb 2007
There are 2 versions of this paper
Organization, Evolution, Cognition and Dynamic Capabilities
Date Written: April 2006
Abstract
Using insights from 'embodied cognition' and a resulting 'cognitive theory of the firm', I aim to contribute to the further development of evolutionary theory of organizations, in the specification of organizations as 'interactors' that carry organizational competencies as 'replicators', within industries as 'populations'. Especially, I analyze how, if at all, 'dynamic capabilities' can be fitted into evolutionary theory. I propose that the prime purpose of an organization is to serve as a cognitive 'focusing device'. Here, cognition has a wide meaning, including perception, interpretation, sense making, and value judgements. I analyse how this yields organizations as cohesive wholes, and differences within and between industries. I propose the following sources of variation: replication in communication, novel combinations of existing knowledge, and a path of discovery by which exploitation leads to exploration. These yield a proposal for dynamic capabilities. I discuss in what sense, and to what extent these sources of variation are 'blind', as postulated in evolutionary theory.
Keywords: evolutionary economics, organization, cognition, dynamic capabilities
JEL Classification: D21, L22, O31, B52
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Empirical Tests of Optimal Cognitive Distance
By Stefan Wuyts, Massimo G. Colombo, ...
-
Optimal Cognitive Distance and Absorptive Capacity
By Bart Nooteboom, Wim Vanhaverbeke, ...
-
By Ariel Pakes and Zvi Griliches