The social sciences have sophisticated models of choice and
equilibrium but little understanding of the emergence of novelty.
Where do new alternatives, new organizational forms, and new types
of people come from? Combining biochemical insights about the
origin of life with innovative and historically oriented social
network analyses, John Padgett and Walter Powell develop a theory
about the emergence of organizational, market, and biographical
novelty from the coevolution of multiple social networks. They
demonstrate that novelty arises from spillovers across intertwined
networks in different domains. In the short run actors make
relations, but in the long run relations make actors.
This theory of novelty emerging from intersecting production and
biographical flows is developed through formal deductive modeling
and through a wide range of original historical case studies.
Padgett and Powell build on the biochemical concept of
autocatalysis--the chemical definition of life--and then extend
this autocatalytic reasoning to social processes of production and
communication. Padgett and Powell, along with other colleagues,
analyze a very wide range of cases of emergence. They look at the
emergence of organizational novelty in early capitalism and state
formation; they examine the transformation of communism; and they
analyze with detailed network data contemporary science-based
capitalism: the biotechnology industry, regional high-tech
clusters, and the open source community.
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