The Philosophical Foundations of a Radical Austrian Approach to Entrepreneurship

被引:29
|
作者
Chiles, Todd H. [1 ]
Vultee, Denise M. [2 ]
Gupta, Vishal K. [3 ]
Greening, Daniel W. [4 ]
Tuggle, Christopher S. [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211 USA
[2] Wayne State Univ, Detroit, MI 48202 USA
[3] SUNY Binghamton, Binghamton, NY 13902 USA
[4] Univ Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211 USA
关键词
entrepreneurship; Austrian economics; radical subjectivism; philosophy of science; metaphor; hermeneutics; RESOURCE-BASED VIEW; OPPORTUNITY IDENTIFICATION; CREATIVE DESTRUCTION; UNITED-STATES; METAPHORS; TRANSFORMATION; DISCOVERY; RESPONSES; INSIGHTS; SCIENCE;
D O I
10.1177/1056492609337833
中图分类号
C93 [管理学];
学科分类号
12 ; 1201 ; 1202 ; 120202 ;
摘要
The equilibrium-based approaches that dominate entrepreneurship research offer useful insights into some aspects of entrepreneurship, but they ignore or downplay many fundamental entrepreneurial phenomena such as individuals' creative imaginations, firms' resource (re)combinations, and markets' disequilibrating tendencies-and the genuine uncertainty and widespread heterogeneity these imply. To overcome these limitations, scholars have recently introduced a nonequilibrium approach to entrepreneurship based on Ludwig Lachmann's "radical subjectivist" brand of Austrian economics. Here, this radical Austrian approach is extended beyond Lachmann to include the work of radical subjectivism's other noted theorist: George Shackle. More important, the article extends entrepreneurship research by systematically comparing and contrasting the nascent, radical Austrian approach to entrepreneurship with three dominant equilibrium-based approaches: neoclassical, Kirznerian, and Schumpeterian economics. Specifically, the article (a) explicates the paradigmatic philosophical assumptions about the nature of individuals, firms, and markets that underlie these approaches; (b) demonstrates how metaphor is employed as a device to concretize these assumptions; (c) examines the research questions that arise from the assumptions these metaphors reflect; and (d) uses the Japanese "beer wars" of the 1980s and 1990s to illustrate one methodological approach (hermeneutics) researchers can adopt to apply these assumptions, metaphors, and questions to study entrepreneurial phenomena from a radical subjectivist perspective.
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页码:138 / 164
页数:27
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