What corporations do is very different from biological evolution, but if a corporation develops a successful idea then it is likely to be copied by other corporations without anything like biological reproduction entering the picture.
What corporations do is very different from biological evolution [...]
That’s commonly known as “superorganicism” in anthropology. The paper:
“Culture is Part of Human Biology: Why the Superorganic Concept Serves the Human Sciences Badly”
...explains why this idea needs to go into the dustbin of history.
What corporations do is very different from biological evolution, but if a corporation develops a successful idea then it is likely to be copied by other corporations without anything like biological reproduction entering the picture.
That’s commonly known as “superorganicism” in anthropology. The paper:
“Culture is Part of Human Biology: Why the Superorganic Concept Serves the Human Sciences Badly”
...explains why this idea needs to go into the dustbin of history.