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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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