Ideological evolution : the competitiveness of nations in a global knowledge-based economy
| Document Type |
Thesis |
| Author |
Chartrand, Harry Hillman |
| Email Address |
h-chartrand@shaw.ca |
| URN |
etd-08222006-101534 |
| Title |
Ideological evolution : the competitiveness of nations in a global knowledge-based economy |
| Degree |
Doctor of Philosophy |
| Department |
Interdisciplinary Studies |
| Advisory Committee |
| Advisor Name
| Title
|
| Fulton, Murray E. |
Committee Chair |
| Baber, Zaheer |
Committee Member |
| Isaac, Grant E. |
Committee Member |
| Steele, Tom G. |
Committee Member |
| Khachatourians, George G. |
Supervisor |
| Phillips, Peter W. B. |
Supervisor |
|
| Keywords |
- global
- economics
- competitiveness
- ideology
- knowledge
|
| Copyright Date |
2006-07-20 |
| Availability |
unrestricted |
Abstract
My objective is to deepen and thicken public and private policy debate about the competitiveness of nations in a global knowledge–based economy. To do so I first demonstrate the inadequacies of the Standard Model of economics, the last ideology standing after the Market-Marx Wars. Second, I develop a methodology (Trans-Disciplinary Induction) to acquire ‘knowledge about knowledge’. In the process of surveying the event horizons of seventeen sub-disciplines of thought, I redefine ‘ideology’ as the search for commensurable sets or systems of ideas shared across knowledge domains and practices. Third, I create a definitional avalanche about knowledge as a noun, verb, form and content in etymology, psychology, epistemology & pedagogy, law and economics. In the process I demonstrate that personal & tacit and codified & tooled knowledge are the staple commodities of the global knowledge-based economy. Fourth, I establish the origins and nature of the Nation-State, the shifting sands of sovereignty on which it stands and the complimentary roles it plays as curator, facilitator, patron, architect and engineer of the national knowledge-base. Fifth, I examine the competitiveness of nations with respect to a production function in which all inputs, outputs and coefficients are defined in terms of knowledge. In the process, I demonstrated that competitiveness, as Darwinian win/lose against rivals, is inadequate because it does not account for the mutualism of symbionts and environmental change, i.e., coevolution and coconstruction. Accordingly, I propose ‘fitness’ as a more appropriate criterion for the competitiveness of nations in a global knowledge-based economy. Finally, I consider the comparative advantage of nations given their initial and differing national knowledge endowments.
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