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El. knyga: Understanding Leadership in Complex Systems: A Praxeological Perspective

  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Serija: Understanding Complex Systems
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Jul-2016
  • Leidėjas: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783319404455
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Serija: Understanding Complex Systems
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Jul-2016
  • Leidėjas: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783319404455

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This work proposes that Carl Mengers Subjective Theory of Value (STV), and its subsequent elaboration by Ludwig von Mises as Praxeology, provides a useful alternative to more common methods in the study of action and social phenomena, and more specifically, to leadership in complex social systems. Rather than being based on rationality assumptions and algorithmic predictability, the STV emphasizes transient subjectivity shaped by a complex world of lacking information, mistakes, disequilibrium, uncertainty and attempted error correction that defy mathematization and exact prediction. As such, it is a framework to make sense of human action systems in terms of subjective understanding, learning, and uncertainty, rather than quantitative predictability. Accordingly, the aim of this work is to explain the STV as a general theory of action and to demonstrate its capability in developing adequate qualitative theory and to elaborate on some of the major topics that its implications raise with regard to leadership. The power of the method can be seen in that its procedure naturally branches out to facilitate an understanding of a broad selection of processes and may provide the basis for a universal theory of leadership.
Part I The Subjective Theory of Value and Praxeology
1 Menger's Subjective Theory of Value: Choice Under Uncertainty
3(2)
2 Mises' Praxeology
5(2)
3 Mises' Apriorism
7(2)
4 The Universality of Praxeology
9(4)
5 Praxeology and Leadership
13(2)
6 Leadership as a Process of Exchange Under Uncertainty
15(4)
7 Discussion Scope and Outline
19(8)
Part II The Principles and Methods of Mises' Praxeology
8 Methodological Apriorism
27(14)
8.1 The Criterion of Mises for Accepting a Statement A Priori
27(3)
8.1.1 The Need for A Priori Statements
28(1)
8.1.2 Establishing A Priori Claims
28(2)
8.2 Mises' Two A Priori Principles of Cognition
30(6)
8.2.1 The A Priori Praxeological Structure of the Mind
32(2)
8.2.2 The A Priori Power of the Human Senses
34(2)
8.3 The A Priori of Regularity of Events
36(1)
8.4 The A Priori of Final Cause In Action
37(4)
9 Methodological Principles Regarding the Role of Empirical Data in Praxeology
41(34)
9.1 Methodological Subjectivism
43(6)
9.1.1 The Subjectivity of Action Situational Facts
43(2)
9.1.2 Subjectivity and Irregularity
45(3)
9.1.3 The Shared Nature of Subjective Action Facts
48(1)
9.2 Methodological Individualism
49(8)
9.2.1 The Concept of Methodological Individualism
50(2)
9.2.2 The Action Origin of Social Facts
52(5)
9.3 Methodological Dualism
57(8)
9.3.1 The Methodological Consequences of Irregularity
57(4)
9.3.2 Characteristics of Social Science Based on Dualism
61(2)
9.3.3 Examples of Qualitative Prediction or Laws
63(2)
9.4 The Role of Empirical Testing and Forecasting
65(10)
9.4.1 Von Mises' Rejection of Empirical Research
66(3)
9.4.2 Von Mises Position on Subsidiary Assumptions
69(1)
9.4.3 Evolving the Role of Empirical Data in Theory Development
70(5)
10 The Theory of Human Action, Its A Priori Categories and Assumptions
75(24)
10.1 The A Priori Subjective Theory of Value
76(1)
10.2 The Prerequisites of Action
77(4)
10.2.1 The Prerequisite of Dissatisfaction
77(2)
10.2.2 The Prerequisite of an Image of a Better State (Goal Image)
79(1)
10.2.3 The Prerequisite of Belief in Non-futility of Action (Expectation/Hope)
79(1)
10.2.4 The Category of Regularity as a Corollary of Expectation and Imagination
80(1)
10.2.5 The Subjectivity of the Prerequisites of Action
80(1)
10.3 Ends and Means
81(5)
10.3.1 Action as Exchange
81(1)
10.3.2 Goods
82(1)
10.3.3 The Subjective Theory of Capital and Production
83(1)
10.3.4 The Role of Capital in Universal Praxeology
84(1)
10.3.5 The Subjective Theory of Wealth
85(1)
10.3.6 The Subjective Theory of Cost
85(1)
10.3.7 The Subjective Theory of Profit and Loss
86(1)
10.4 Time as a Category of Action
86(3)
10.4.1 Time Duration
87(1)
10.4.2 Time Preference
88(1)
10.4.3 Time and Higher Order Goods
88(1)
10.5 Uncertainty and Speculation
89(2)
10.6 Clarifying the Concept of Purposeful Action and Rational Behavior
91(8)
10.6.1 Rational Versus Irrational Action
92(1)
10.6.2 Purposeful Action Versus Unconscious Mental Processes and Habits
93(2)
10.6.3 The A Priori of Cues to Action
95(4)
11 Methodological Procedures in Praxeology
99(22)
11.1 The Procedures of von Mises
99(10)
11.1.1 A Summary of the Steps of Building Praxeological Theorems
101(1)
11.1.2 The Nature of Praxeological Theorems
102(1)
11.1.3 Imaginary Constructions---The Method of Praxeology
103(2)
11.1.4 Imaginary Constructions Employed by von Mises
105(1)
11.1.5 Value Freedom in Praxeology
105(4)
11.2 Von Mises' Method of Economics Briefly Described
109(12)
11.2.1 The Static Method and Entrepreneurship as Change Agency
109(3)
11.2.2 Employing the Static Method to Understand the Process of Action Between Entrepreneurship, the Division of Labor and Consumer Sovereignty
112(4)
11.2.3 The Business Cycle Theory of von Mises; The Use of Action-Based Definitions and Empirical Assumptions
116(2)
11.2.4 Empirical Issues in von Mises' Economics; Falsification Based on Assumptions
118(3)
12 Distinguishing Features of Praxeology
121(8)
Part III Entrepreneurship, Imitation and Innovation
13 Praxeology Versus Social Evolution as A Priori Frameworks
129(4)
14 Entrepreneurship as Evolution of Action
133(4)
15 The Ultimate A Priori of Discovery
137(4)
16 The Logic of Perceived Possibilities---Praxeology and the Process of Evolutionary Learning
141(4)
17 Defining Innovation from a Praxeological Perspective
145(4)
18 The "A Priori" Category of Imagination
149(4)
19 Some A Priori Aspects of Learning
153(6)
Part IV The Human Action of Leadership
20 Conceptualizing Leadership
159(8)
20.1 Trait Theories of Leadership
160(1)
20.2 Behavioral Leadership Theories
160(1)
20.3 Situational Leadership Theories
161(1)
20.4 Information Processing Perspective on Leadership
162(1)
20.5 Transformational Leadership Theories
162(5)
21 Conceptualizing Leadership Action Praxeologically
167(4)
22 The Follower Purposeful Response
171(2)
23 The Category of the Response Cue (R Cue)
173(4)
24 The Subjective Theory of Value and Following
177(4)
25 Uncertainty
181(10)
25.1 Follower Habit and Entrepreneurship
183(3)
25.2 Coordination of Knowledge
186(5)
26 Power as a Category of Leadership Action
191(10)
26.1 The Subjective Theory of Value and Power
192(1)
26.2 The Subjective Value of Authority
193(2)
26.3 Power and Habit
195(1)
26.4 How Power Is Generated and Consumed
196(2)
26.5 Power and the Distribution of Knowledge
198(3)
27 Meta Leadership
201(6)
27.1 Cooperation and Hierarchy
202(5)
Part V Synthesis
28 The Principles of Praxeology and Its Role as a Method of Social Science
207(4)
29 Evolution and Change in Action
211(4)
30 Leadership
215(6)
Epilogue 221(2)
Bibliography 223(18)
Index 241