For instance, this work uses an #EvolutionaryEconomics lens to consider #AI, finding among many things that #BigTech dominates enablement (hardware, data) and production (frameworks, algorithms, visualisation), benefitting from economies of scale and scope, especially the wide access to #data from their own sources and their many dependent customers

``the seamless, digital connectedness enabled by AI-as-technology is, in our view, a unique feature that we have yet to fully grasp in terms of its #economic, #managerial, and even #psychological implications''

https://pubsonline.informs.org/doi/10.1287/stsc.2021.0148

@JohnShirley2023 Interesting article, thanks for sharing. I spent a lot of time looking at at Margolis' work on #symbiogenesis in the late aughts, directed there by looking at #memetics and #evolutionaryeconomics (separately) and the mechanisms thereof, and it really influenced my work.

Watson's /Compositional Evolution/ (2006) was helpful, though sadly no longer on the bookshelf.

Expanding the possible: exploring the role for heterodox economics in integrated climate-economy modeling - Review of Evolutionary Political Economy

This paper explores the degree to which heterodox economics can contribute to the development and use of climate-economy integrated assessment models. To do so, it introduces the field of integrated assessment modeling, with a focus on the core economic methodology used by various types of models. It then summarizes some of the literature critiquing these models and how they inform policy. The paper then provides an extended classification of ways in which heterodox economics could be applied to climate-economy models and presents a number of storylines, or pathways, which could be created using insights and methods from heterodox schools. The paper concludes with an assessment of the scope for heterodox economics to answer the criticisms of climate-economy models, finding that despite not resolving all issues, the heterodoxy has a substantial role to play.

SpringerLink