MARKETING HEIDEGGER + A REPLY TO SPINOSA, FLORES, AND DREYFUS - ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND CORPORATE PRACTICES

被引:3
|
作者
SOLOMON, RC
机构
[1] Department of Philosophy, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX
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关键词
D O I
10.1080/00201749508602375
中图分类号
B82 [伦理学(道德学)];
学科分类号
摘要
Spinosa, Flores, and Dreyfus have made some valuable suggestions about the important but (in philosophy) much neglected concept of entrepreneurship. An entrepreneur, in the classical economists’ lexicon, is a person who founds, organizes, and manages a business. In more modem conversation, he or she is a business hero or heroine. Nowhere is the new emphasis on entrepreneurship more evident than in our largest corporations. The authors analyse the entrepreneur not as an eccentric or a maverick but in terms a specific way of operating within existing social practices. They reject the still prevalent caricature of the avaricious entrepreneur in the grip of greed as well as the too ‘genius’-oriented conception of the inventor who cannot manage his own affairs, much less a corporation. An entrepreneur, on their account, is someone who knows how to notice and ‘hold on to’ an anomaly and creates a market, sometimes where there was no market at all. They argue that entrepreneurship essentially involves conversation. It is not mere inventiveness. This ‘reconfiguration’ of entrepreneurship explains a great deal about what many corporations - at considerable expense - are learning about their own activities and operations, and many established and successful companies are struggling to transform themselves in just the direction that Spinosa, Flores, and Dreyfus have outlined. © 1995 Taylor & Francis Group.
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页码:75 / 81
页数:7
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