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Paul's avatar

Interesting take. I'm not sure capitalism and academia can be separated here, such that it is one killing the other. In our love-affair with entrepreneurialism -- a term Schumpeter did much to promote -- we forget that Schumpeter himself thinks the great age of the entrepreneur is over. With the advent of the corporation, a necessary vehicle of the build-out of the second industrial revolution, innovation is also institutionalized in corporate R&D. So innovation is bureaucratized in the private sector as well. The result is bureaucracy across society. The reason is fundamentally, the same. As science and technology advances, specialization becomes the order of the day, and the problem becomes to coordinate the ever greater number of specialists, whether in corporations or universities. The age when the individual idea-entrepreneur could run his own organization/institution is at an end.

In academia, we find the rise of research university in the late nineteenth century parallels the rise of the corporation. Darwin, Marx, and JS Mill, three of the great "idea-entrepreneurs" of the mid-19th century, all operated outside the university system in ways that are hard to imagine today. Even a later generation of people like Weber and Durkheim, who were lifelong academics, were not products of undergraduate education in the fields we would see them as belonging to today. They were mostly trained in law and moral philosophy. Alfred Marshall, who founded neoclassical economics in the Anglophone world, was himself trained in mathematics and moral philosophy, as was Keynes. I think it could be argued that the low-hanging fruit in the social sciences has also been picked. As far as I can tell, after the second world war, university education was highly specialized and the age of the generalist idea-entrepreneur was largely over. Ironically, today entrepreneurialism is taught in university business schools, although the vast majority of their graduates will be mid-level managers in corporations.

The crisis here is really one of the conflict between high-levels of specialization necessary to fund education and implement innovation and growth -- and the bureaucratic structure this entails -- working against the individual idea-innovator. It is a problem for capitalism, but also for industrialized societies in general - a sociological problem that Marx, Weber, Durkheim and Schumpeter can all agree on. Kuhn and Foucault essentially tell the same story -- the conflict of the normalizing "scientific" institution and the the anomaly.

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Miguel Madeira's avatar

It was really "academia" that Schumpeter thought that will destoy capitalism? Or it was more people-who-dream-of-being-academics-but-who-can't-find-a-job-there?

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