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Volumn 6, Issue 3, 2008, Pages 39-51

The Population Ecology Programme in Organisation Studies: Problems Caused by Unwarranted Theory Transfer

Author keywords

Biological Entity; Management Volume; Organisation Study; Organisation Theory; Organisational Form

Indexed keywords


EID: 77955355742     PISSN: 17403812     EISSN: 20529597     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.5840/pom20086319     Document Type: Article
Times cited : (5)

References (64)
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    • Of course, there are also many examples in which theories from other domains of natural science are imported into economics and social studies. Including these in our discussion would however require another paper
    • Of course, there are also many examples in which theories from other domains of natural science are imported into economics and social studies. Including these in our discussion would however require another paper
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    • The question what makes a particular entity a biological or a non-biological entity is not unequivocally answerable. For example, the position that all and only entities that are alive are biological entities is vulnerable to the objection that the notions of ‘life’ and ‘being alive’ are not clearly defined. Furthermore, it seems open to the move that one could extend the scope of the notion of ‘being alive’ so far that the entities that one wishes to conceive of as biological entities fall under the extended notion. Hence, we conceive of the distinction between biological and non-biological entities as the distinction between on the one hand what normally is studied by biologists and to which the theories of biological science were originally devised to apply and on the other hand what is not normally studied within the domain of biological science. In this sense, organisations clearly are nonbiological entities. We provide this clarification in response to a comment by an anonymous referee and will return to this matter in Section 2
    • The question what makes a particular entity a biological or a non-biological entity is not unequivocally answerable. For example, the position that all and only entities that are alive are biological entities is vulnerable to the objection that the notions of ‘life’ and ‘being alive’ are not clearly defined. Furthermore, it seems open to the move that one could extend the scope of the notion of ‘being alive’ so far that the entities that one wishes to conceive of as biological entities fall under the extended notion. Hence, we conceive of the distinction between biological and non-biological entities as the distinction between on the one hand what normally is studied by biologists and to which the theories of biological science were originally devised to apply and on the other hand what is not normally studied within the domain of biological science. In this sense, organisations clearly are nonbiological entities. We provide this clarification in response to a comment by an anonymous referee and will return to this matter in Section 2
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    • We have examined the case of organisational ecology in detail elsewhere; see
    • We have examined the case of organisational ecology in detail elsewhere; see
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    • An anonymous referee suggested that many epistemologists are inclined to understand all models as metaphors, so that there would be nothing wrong in principle with using evolutionary models in the economic/social domain. While this may be the case, it should be noted that this is far from a generally accepted view among philosophers of science. Current philosophy of science (especially in the philosophy of economics / social science and the philosophy of biology) is witnessing an increasing attention for the use of models in science — and many of the participants in these debates do not conceive of models as mere metaphors. For an overview of the current state of the philosophical discussion on models in science, see R Frigg & S Hartmann, ‘Models in science’ in E Zalta (Ed.) Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (spring 2008 edition, online)
    • An anonymous referee suggested that many epistemologists are inclined to understand all models as metaphors, so that there would be nothing wrong in principle with using evolutionary models in the economic/social domain. While this may be the case, it should be noted that this is far from a generally accepted view among philosophers of science. Current philosophy of science (especially in the philosophy of economics / social science and the philosophy of biology) is witnessing an increasing attention for the use of models in science — and many of the participants in these debates do not conceive of models as mere metaphors. For an overview of the current state of the philosophical discussion on models in science, see R Frigg & S Hartmann, ‘Models in science’ in E Zalta (Ed.) Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (spring 2008 edition, online) 2008
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    • Good overviews of current evolutionary economics can be found in
    • Good overviews of current evolutionary economics can be found in :
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    • For a recent review of how evolutionary economics is currently being re-imported into biology, see Hammerstein & Hagen 2005 op cit
    • For a recent review of how evolutionary economics is currently being re-imported into biology, see Hammerstein & Hagen 2005 op cit
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    • Mass is a physical property, notwithstanding that the masses that actual organisms possess have evolutionary and developmental backgrounds. Also, the mass of an organism can play a role in biological processes and the theories that describe them. Still, mass is a physical and not a biological property, because mass is defined in the context of a physical theory. Mass is embedded in physical theory, but can still feature in biological theories
    • Let us provide the following additional clarification. Mass is a physical property, notwithstanding that the masses that actual organisms possess have evolutionary and developmental backgrounds. Also, the mass of an organism can play a role in biological processes and the theories that describe them. Still, mass is a physical and not a biological property, because mass is defined in the context of a physical theory. Mass is embedded in physical theory, but can still feature in biological theories
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    • A good overview of the conceptual history of evolutionary theory is P Bowler Evolution: The History of an Idea (third edition) University of California Press, Berkeley
    • A good overview of the conceptual history of evolutionary theory is P Bowler Evolution: The History of an Idea (third edition) University of California Press, Berkeley 2003
    • (2003)
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    • Reydon & Scholz op cit
    • Reydon & Scholz op cit
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    • Hannan & Freeman, for instance, asserted to be aiming ‘to move toward an application of modern population ecology theory to the study of organisation-environment relations’ (Hannan & Freeman 1977 op cit p 956, our emphasis) and described their approach as ‘an approach (…) that builds on general ecological and evolutionary models of change. (…) We have adapted ecological models to sociological uses and changed them in the process’ (J Freeman & M T Hannan ‘Setting the record straight on organisational ecology: rebuttal to Young’ American Journal of Sociology 95 (1989) pp 425–439, see pp 426–428, emphasis added; also Hannan & Freeman 1989 op cit p xiii). McKelvey asserted that evolutionary theory is one of the ‘four main subcomponents of the population view. (…) The principal need for evolutionary theory is to explain how there come to be so many kinds of organisations. (…) [T]his is a question calling for systematic and evolutionist analysis’ (McKelvey 1982 op cit pp 437–438; our emphasis)
    • Hannan & Freeman, for instance, asserted to be aiming ‘to move toward an application of modern population ecology theory to the study of organisation-environment relations’ (Hannan & Freeman 1977 op cit p 956, our emphasis) and described their approach as ‘an approach (…) that builds on general ecological and evolutionary models of change. (…) We have adapted ecological models to sociological uses and changed them in the process’ (J Freeman & M T Hannan ‘Setting the record straight on organisational ecology: rebuttal to Young’ American Journal of Sociology 95 (1989) pp 425–439, see pp 426–428, emphasis added; also Hannan & Freeman 1989 op cit p xiii). McKelvey asserted that evolutionary theory is one of the ‘four main subcomponents of the population view. (…) The principal need for evolutionary theory is to explain how there come to be so many kinds of organisations. (…) [T]his is a question calling for systematic and evolutionist analysis’ (McKelvey 1982 op cit pp 437–438; our emphasis).’
  • 33
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    • Hannan & Freeman 1977 op cit pp 936 & 956; McKelvey 1978 op cit p 1437; Hannan 2005 op cit p 51
    • Hannan & Freeman 1977 op cit pp 936 & 956; McKelvey 1978 op cit p 1437; Hannan 2005 op cit p 51
  • 34
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    • Generalisation and kinds in natural science: The case of species
    • Phylogenetic inertia has been discussed by one of us elsewhere: T A C Reydon
    • Phylogenetic inertia has been discussed by one of us elsewhere: T A C Reydon ‘Generalisation and kinds in natural science: The case of species’ Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 37 (2006) pp 230–255
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    • For a detailed argumentation of this claim, see Reydon & Scholz op cit
    • For a detailed argumentation of this claim, see Reydon & Scholz op cit
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    • And, it should be emphasised, ‘In Darwin’s theory, only populations evolve’ (Bowler op cit p 11; emphasis added). An anonymous referee suggested that because organisational information such as routines, core competences, etc. can be conceived of as the ‘genes’ of organisations that are being replicated, it would be legitimate to think of organisational change as an evolutionary process. But this is not the case. Replication is merely one of the sub-processes of biological evolution and replication alone does not constitute evolution. Our point is that ‘populations’ of organisations cannot evolve in the same sense as biological populations do, irrespective of whether units of replication can be identified in the organisational domain
    • And, it should be emphasised, ‘In Darwin’s theory, only populations evolve’ (Bowler op cit p 11; emphasis added). An anonymous referee suggested that because organisational information such as routines, core competences, etc. can be conceived of as the ‘genes’ of organisations that are being replicated, it would be legitimate to think of organisational change as an evolutionary process. But this is not the case. Replication is merely one of the sub-processes of biological evolution and replication alone does not constitute evolution. Our point is that ‘populations’ of organisations cannot evolve in the same sense as biological populations do, irrespective of whether units of replication can be identified in the organisational domain
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    • Hannan 2005 op cit p 52 (emphasis added)
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    • McKelvey 1982 op cit p xviii
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    • McKelvey 1978 op cit p 1438 (emphasis added)
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    • Generally speaking, analogies pick out important structural similarities that obtain between two entities or phenomena and obscure less important differences, whereas metaphors constitute a more loose way of drawing resemblances between two entities or phenomena. For an account of the difference, see, A Ortony (Ed) Metaphor and Thought (2nd edition), Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
    • Generally speaking, analogies pick out important structural similarities that obtain between two entities or phenomena and obscure less important differences, whereas metaphors constitute a more loose way of drawing resemblances between two entities or phenomena. For an account of the difference, see D Gentner & M Jeziorski ‘The shift from metaphor to analogy in Western science’ in: A Ortony (Ed) Metaphor and Thought (2nd edition) pp 447–480 Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1993
    • (1993) The Shift from Metaphor to Analogy in Western Science , pp. 447-480
    • Gentner, D.1    Jeziorski, M.2
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    • For the cognitive usefulness of metaphors, see G Lakoff & M Johnson Metaphors We Live By University of Chicago Press, Chicago & London, D C Rosenthal ‘Metaphors, models and analogies in social science and public policy’ Political Behavior, Gentner & Jeziorski 1993 op cit
    • For the cognitive usefulness of metaphors, see G Lakoff & M Johnson Metaphors We Live By University of Chicago Press, Chicago & London 1980; D C Rosenthal ‘Metaphors, models and analogies in social science and public policy’ Political Behavior 4 (1982) pp 283–301; Gentner & Jeziorski 1993 op cit
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    • G Morgan ‘Paradigms, metaphors, and puzzle solving in organisation theory’ Administrative Science Quarterly25 (1980) pp 605–622; G Morgan ‘More on metaphor: why we cannot control tropes in administrative science’ Administrative Science Quarterly 28 (1983) pp 601–607; G Morgan Images of organisations Sage, Beverly Hills 1986; see also C C Pinder & W V Bourgeois ‘Controlling tropes in administrative science’ Administrative Science Quarterly 27 (1982) pp 641–652; W V Bourgeois & C C Pinder ‘Contrasting philosophical perspectives in administrative science: a reply to Morgan’ Administrative Science Quarterly 28 (1983) pp 608–613
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    • Morgan 1983 op cit; emphasis added
    • Morgan 1983 op cit; emphasis added
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    • This lens-metaphor is due to R L Flood & M C Jackson Creative Problem Solving: Total Systems Intervention Wiley, Chichester
    • This lens-metaphor is due to R L Flood & M C Jackson Creative Problem Solving: Total Systems Intervention Wiley, Chichester 1991
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    • Morgan 1986 op cit pp 19–36
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    • Pinder & Bourgeois 1982 op cit p 647
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    • Morgan 1986 op cit p 74. As an anonymous referee pointed out, the effect might be the de-motivation of managers (who might feel that their actions will not have much effect) rather than the actual undermining of their powers to act and structure their organisations. Indeed, the fact that environments constrain the possibilities of managers’ actions does not necessarily imply that managers are powerless. (Consider Marx’s often quoted observation that people make their own history, albeit not in circumstances of their own choosing.) However, the risk remains present that overemphasising the importance of selection in the organisational domain leads managers to act as if they indeed were powerless and therewith unwittingly to concede whatever power they did possess
    • Morgan 1986 op cit p 74. As an anonymous referee pointed out, the effect might be the de-motivation of managers (who might feel that their actions will not have much effect) rather than the actual undermining of their powers to act and structure their organisations. Indeed, the fact that environments constrain the possibilities of managers’ actions does not necessarily imply that managers are powerless. (Consider Marx’s often quoted observation that people make their own history, albeit not in circumstances of their own choosing.) However, the risk remains present that overemphasising the importance of selection in the organisational domain leads managers to act as if they indeed were powerless and therewith unwittingly to concede whatever power they did possess
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    • As an anonymous referee pointed out, this is precisely the opposite from the effect that may occur when managers’ rewards are coupled to the performance of their companies: managers might then be punished for malfunctionings of their organisations that are caused by factors that are out of their control
    • As an anonymous referee pointed out, this is precisely the opposite from the effect that may occur when managers’ rewards are coupled to the performance of their companies: managers might then be punished for malfunctionings of their organisations that are caused by factors that are out of their control
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    • Morgan 1986 op cit p 76
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    • Orangenbäumchen am Plattensee
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    • As an anonymous referee pointed out, the legitimisation of selfish and ethically problematic corporate actions as being ‘natural’ does not depend on the adoption of a biological perspective. In fact, as the referee pointed out, from a Marxist perspective ethical considerations might even be seen as distorting the ‘natural’ mechanisms by which the market operates. This is indeed true, but it is also important to see that irrespectively of which view of how the market operates is taken, the organisational ecological perspective by itself can already (wrongly!) suggest that particular behaviors are ‘natural’ and therefore legitimate
    • As an anonymous referee pointed out, the legitimisation of selfish and ethically problematic corporate actions as being ‘natural’ does not depend on the adoption of a biological perspective. In fact, as the referee pointed out, from a Marxist perspective ethical considerations might even be seen as distorting the ‘natural’ mechanisms by which the market operates. This is indeed true, but it is also important to see that irrespectively of which view of how the market operates is taken, the organisational ecological perspective by itself can already (wrongly!) suggest that particular behaviors are ‘natural’ and therefore legitimate
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    • Von der Oelsnitz 2005 op cit p 341
    • (2005) , pp. 341
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    • Is population ecology a useful paradigm for the study of organisations?
    • Eg
    • Eg, R C Young ‘ Is population ecology a useful paradigm for the study of organisations? ’ American Journal of Sociology 94 (1988) pp 1–24
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    • Evolutionstheoretische Ansätze
    • in: A Kieser & M Ebers (Eds), 6. Auflage, Kohlhammer, Stuttgart
    • A Kieser & M Woywode ‘ Evolutionstheoretische Ansätze ’ in: A Kieser & M Ebers (Eds) Organisationstheorien (6. Auflage) pp 309–352 Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 2006
    • (2006) Organisationstheorien , pp. 309-352
    • Kieser, A.1    Woywode, M.2
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    • McKelvey 1982 op cit p 448
    • (1982) , pp. 448
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    • op cit, Aldrich 1979 op cit p 256
    • Cf. Hannan & Freeman 1989 op cit p 150; Aldrich 1979 op cit p 256
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    • Donaldson 1995 op cit
    • Donaldson 1995 op cit
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    • McKelvey, op cit
    • McKelvey 1982 op cit pp 446–449
    • (1982) , pp. 446-449
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    • Cf. the suggestive passages in McKelvey 1982 op cit
    • Cf. the suggestive passages in McKelvey 1982 op cit pp 448–449
  • 64
    • 85058362566 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • We thank Mehmet Elgin, Paul Hoyningen—Huene and an anonymous referee for helpful comments on an earlier draft of this paper. The ideas presented in this paper were also presented at the workshop Betriebswirtschaftslehre und Unternehmensethik, organised by the committee on philosophy of science of the Association of University Professors of Management, Ludwig Maximilians University, Munich, March 2007; see: M Scholz & T A C Reydon ‘Wie praktische Probleme aus ungerechtfertigter Theorieübertragung hervorgehen können: Eine Fallstudie des populationsökologischen Ansatzes in der Organisationstheorie’ in: A G Scherer & M Patzer (Eds) Betriebswirtschaftslehre und Unternehmensethik, Gabler, Wiesbaden 2008, and at the fourth Philosophy of Management conference, St. Anne’s College, Oxford, July
    • We thank Mehmet Elgin, Paul Hoyningen—Huene and an anonymous referee for helpful comments on an earlier draft of this paper. The ideas presented in this paper were also presented at the workshop Betriebswirtschaftslehre und Unternehmensethik, organised by the committee on philosophy of science of the Association of University Professors of Management (Ludwig Maximilians University, Munich, March 2007; see: M Scholz & T A C Reydon ‘Wie praktische Probleme aus ungerechtfertigter Theorieübertragung hervorgehen können: Eine Fallstudie des populationsökologischen Ansatzes in der Organisationstheorie’ in: A G Scherer & M Patzer (Eds) Betriebswirtschaftslehre und Unternehmensethik pp 125–143 Gabler, Wiesbaden 2008) and at the fourth Philosophy of Management conference (St. Anne’s College, Oxford, July 2007)
    • (2007) , pp. 125-143


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