Author
Heinrich, T
Journal title
Journal of Economic Issues
DOI
10.1080/00213624.2017.1320912
Issue
2
Volume
51
Last updated
2021-09-26T04:53:17.843+01:00
Page
383-391
Abstract
Some models in evolutionary economics rely on direct analogies to genetic evolution, assuming a population of firms with routines, technologies, and strategies on which forces of diversity generation and selection act. This narrow conception can build upon previous findings from evolutionary biology. Broader concepts of evolution allow many or just one adaptive entity, instead of necessarily requiring a population. Thus, an institution or a society can also be understood as an evolutionary entity. Both the narrow and broad approaches have been extensively used in the literature, albeit in different literature traditions. I provide an overview of the conception and development of both approaches to evolutionary modeling, and argue that a generalization is needed to realize the full potential of evolutionary modeling.
Symplectic ID
691602
Publication type
Journal Article
Publication date
19 May 2017
Please contact us with feedback and comments about this page. Created on 28 Apr 2017 - 17:30.